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+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
+Procedures for determining public domain status are described in
+the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org.
+
+No investigation has been made concerning possible copyrights in
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+status under the laws that apply to them.
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #69952 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/69952)
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-The Project Gutenberg eBook of Leonard Lindsay, by Angus B. Reach
-
-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: Leonard Lindsay
- or, the story of a buccaneer
-
-Author: Angus B. Reach
-
-Release Date: February 4, 2023 [eBook #69952]
-
-Language: English
-
-Produced by: Bob Taylor, Tim Lindell and the Online Distributed
- Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was
- produced from images generously made available by The
- Internet Archive/Canadian Libraries)
-
-*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK LEONARD LINDSAY ***
-
-
-
-
-
- Transcriber’s Note
- Italic text displayed as: _italic_
-
-
-
-
- LEONARD LINDSAY
- OR
- _THE STORY OF A BUCCANEER_
-
- BY
-
- ANGUS B. REACH
-
- “NO PEACE BEYOND THE LINE.”—_Old Sailors Proverb_
-
-
- LONDON
-
- GEORGE ROUTLEDGE AND SONS
-
- THE BROADWAY, LUDGATE
-
- NEW YORK: 416 BROOME STREET
-
-
-
-
- CONTENTS.
-
-
- PAGE
-
- CHAPTER I.
-
- OF MY BOYHOOD, AND HOW, BEING CAST AWAY AT SEA, I AM
- CARRIED TO THE WEST INDIES AGAINST MY WILL 1
-
-
- CHAPTER II.
-
- OF MY ESCAPE FROM THE FRENCH SHIP, AND MY LANDING IN
- HISPANIOLA 18
-
-
- CHAPTER III.
-
- I JOIN A BROTHERHOOD OF HUNTERS AND ADVENTURERS ON
- THE COAST 27
-
-
- CHAPTER IV.
-
- OF THE LIFE OF A BUCCANEER 39
-
-
- CHAPTER V.
-
- HOW WE ENCOUNTER GREAT DANGERS, THE SPANIARDS
- ATTACKING US 44
-
-
- CHAPTER VI.
-
- HOW THE DEADLY FEVER OF THE COAST FASTENS ON ME 58
-
-
- CHAPTER VII.
-
- THE BUCCANEERS TIRE OF THE LIFE ON SHORE, AND DETERMINE
- TO GO AGAIN TO SEA 64
-
- CHAPTER VIII.
-
- THE LEGEND OF FOUL-WEATHER DON 73
-
-
- CHAPTER IX.
-
- THE AUTHOR, WITH SUNDRY OF HIS COMRADES, SET OUT FOR
- THE CREEK WHERE HE LEFT HIS BARK, AND THERE
- BRAVELY CAPTURE A SPANISH SCHOONER 89
-
-
- CHAPTER X.
-
- THEY RETURN WITH THE PRIZE TO THE MARMOUSETTES, AND
- NICKY HAMSTRING SHORTLY RELATES HIS HISTORY 103
-
-
- CHAPTER XI.
-
- THE BUCCANEERS PRESENTLY SET SAIL IN THE SCHOONER
- FOR JAMAICA, WITH A RELATION OF THE EVENTS WHICH
- HAPPENED THERE 110
-
-
- CHAPTER XII.
-
- OF THE DEATH OF AN OLD FRIEND 125
-
-
- CHAPTER XIII.
-
- THE BUCCANEERS SAIL FOR THE SPANISH MAIN, AND ARE
- CHASED BY A GREAT SHIP OF WAR 131
-
-
- CHAPTER XIV.
-
- THE STRANGE ADVENTURE OF THE UNKNOWN SHOALS AND THE
- DWARF PILOT 140
-
-
- CHAPTER XV.
-
- AT LENGTH THEY CATCH THE DWARF PILOT, AND HEAR
- STRANGE THINGS TOUCHING A TREASURE 157
-
-
- CHAPTER XVI.
-
- HOW THE DWARF TURNS TRAITOR, AND OF HIS FATE 170
-
-
- CHAPTER XVII.
-
- OF THEIR UNSUCCESSFUL SEARCH FOR THE SUNKEN TREASURE—WEARYING
- AT LENGTH OF THE UNDERTAKING, THEY
- PURSUE THEIR COURSE—THE LEGEND OF ‘NELL’S BEACON,’
- OR THE ‘CORPUS SANT’ 183
-
-
- CHAPTER XVIII.
-
- A KNAVE OF THE CREW PLAYING WITH COGGED DICE IS
- KEEL-HAULED 191
-
-
- CHAPTER XIX.
-
- WE CRUISE OFF CARTHAGENA AWAITING THE GALLEON, AND I
- FALL INTO THE HANDS OF THE SPANIARDS 205
-
-
- CHAPTER XX.
-
- I AM TRIED AND TORTURED BY THE SPANIARDS 220
-
-
- CHAPTER XXI.
-
- HOW I ESCAPE FROM THE SPANISH GUARDHOUSE—AM CHASED
- BY BLOOD-HOUNDS IN THE WOODS, AND HOW AT LENGTH
- I FIND A STRANGE ASYLUM 243
-
-
- CHAPTER XXII.
-
- THE FAMILY OF THE SPANISH MERCHANT 263
-
-
- CHAPTER XXIII.
-
- HOW WE SAIL TO JOIN THE PEARL FLEET, AND THE NEGRO
- DIVER’S STORY 282
-
-
- CHAPTER XXIV.
-
- MY ADVENTURES AMONG THE PEARL FISHERS, AND MY ESCAPE
- FROM THE FLEET 303
-
-
- CHAPTER XXV.
-
- THE PIRAGUA IS PICKED UP BY A GREAT PRIVATEER, AND I
- FIND MYSELF AMONG NEW SHIPMATES 338
-
-
- CHAPTER XXVI.
-
- THE LEGEND OF THE DEMON WHO HAUNTS POINT MORANT
- IN JAMAICA 357
-
-
- CHAPTER XXVII.
-
- WHAT HAPPENS ABOARD THE ‘SAUCY SUSAN’—AND THE ENDING
- OF HER AND HER CREW 369
-
-
- CHAPTER XXVIII.
-
- THE FOODLESS BOAT AND THE ISLAND 397
-
-
- CHAPTER XXIX.
-
- THE DISCOVERY OF A NEW WORLD 412
-
-
- CHAPTER THE LAST.
-
- I MEET OLD FRIENDS 416
-
-
-
-
- LEONARD LINDSAY;
-
- OR,
-
- THE STORY OF A BUCCANEER.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER I.
-
-OF MY BOYHOOD, AND HOW, BEING CAST AWAY AT SEA, I AM CARRIED TO THE
-WEST INDIES AGAINST MY WILL.
-
-
-It was in the fair sunlight of a May morning, in the year of Grace
-1672, that that great brave ship, the Golden Grove of Leith, hoisted
-her broad sails, with many a fluttering pendant and streamer above
-them, and stood proudly down the Firth of Forth, designing to reach
-the open ocean, not far from the hill, well known to mariners by
-the name of the North Berwick Law. On board of the Golden Grove, I,
-LEONARD LINDSAY, then in my twenty-second year, was, you must know,
-a sailor, and I hope a bold one. My father was a fisherman, and, as
-I may say, his coble was my cradle. Many a rough rocking in truth it
-bestowed upon me, for it was his use even before I could go alone,
-to carry me with him a fishing, wrapped up, it may be, in a tattered
-sail, while my mother, with a creel upon her back, journeyed through
-the landward towns, and to the houses of the gentry, to sell the
-spoil of hook and net.
-
-We fared hard and worked hard; for no more industrious folk lived
-in the fisher-town of Kirk Leslie, a pleasant and goodly spot,
-lying not far from the East Neuk of Fife, than old Davie Lindsay
-and Jess, his wife and my mother. Many a weary night and day have
-come and gone since I beheld that beach whereon I was born; but I
-can yet shut my eyes and see our cottage and our boat—called the
-“Royal Thistle”—rocking at the lee of the long rough pier of unhewn
-whinstone, gathered from the wild muirs around, which ran into the
-sea and sheltered the little fisher harbour, formed by the burn of
-Balwearie, where it joins the waters of its black pools to the salt
-brine. Opposite our house was a pretty green bourock, as we called
-it, that is to say, a little hill, mostly of bright green turf, with
-bunches of bent and long grass, which rustled with a sharp sad sound
-when the east wind blew snell, and creeping cosily into the chimney
-neuk, we would listen to the roaring of the sea. But the bourock was
-oftentimes brown with nets or with wet sails stretched there to dry,
-and below it there lay half-buried in the sand, old boats, mouldering
-away and masts and oars all shivered, bleaching like big bones in the
-sun and the rain.
-
-I remember old Davie Lindsay my father well. He was a stern, big man,
-with a grisly grey beard, shaved but once a month. No fisher on the
-coast had a surer hand for the tiller, or a firmer gripe to haul aft
-the sheet of the lugsail in a fresh breeze and a gathering sea. Often
-when we were rising and falling on the easterly swell, half-a-score
-miles from Kirk Leslie pier, he loved to tell me old-world tales and
-sing old-world songs of the sea. Then would he recount how the Rover
-sunk the bell which good abbot Ignatius, of Aberbrothwick, caused to
-be placed upon the wild Bell Rock, as a guide to poor mariners; and
-how the pirate dreed the weird—that is, underwent the fate—he had
-prepared for himself, and was lost with ship and crew on that very
-reef. Sometimes, too, he would drop his voice, and when I came close
-to him, he would speak of great monsters in the sea; of the ocean
-snake, whose head looked up at the bridge of Stirling, and whose tail
-went nine times round the Bass; of singing mermaids, who come upon
-the yellow sands at night, and beguile men with their false lays,
-till they leave house and home, being bewitched by the glamour of
-elfin palaces under the brine; and, most terrible of all, of phantom
-ships with crews of ghosts, which sailors see by the pale glimmerings
-of the moon, when it shines through the driving scud, upon a mirk
-midnight and a roaring sea. But, then, if I was frightened and cried,
-my father would straightway change the theme, and burst out with a
-strong clear voice into some loud fishing-song, or, what I loved
-better still, into some brave, ancient ballad, about the fair kingdom
-of Scotland, and its gallant kings and stalwart knights; and of such,
-my favourite was the lay of Sir Patrick Spens, for he was both a
-knight and a sailor.
-
- “The king sits in Dunfermline town,
- Drinking the blude-red wine,
- O whare will I get a skeely skipper
- To sail this ship of mine?
-
- “Then up and spake an eldern knight,
- Sat at the king’s right knee,
- Sir Patrick Spens is the best sailor
- That ever sailed the sea.”
-
-Oh, I can yet hear my father’s strong voice rising over the dash of
-the water and the moan of the wind, as he sung the brave voyage of
-Sir Patrick to Norroway, to bring home the king’s daughter; but his
-tones would sink and grow hoarse and low, when he chanted the storm,
-and the perishing of all the fair company on the voyage home.
-
- “O forty mile off Aberdeen
- ’Tis fifty fathom deep,
- And there lies gude Sir Patrick Spens,
- Wi’ the Scots lords at his feet.”
-
-My father’s long home was also the bottom of the sea. One wild March
-day, the coble left Kirk Leslie pier without me. I staid at home
-mending a dredge-net with my mother. The easterly har was on the
-coast, that is to say, thick cold mists and a keen wind. As the sun
-rose high so did the tempest; we could see nought seaward, for the
-grey fog was out upon the water, but every wave came white, over
-and over the pier, from end to end. My mother went to and fro, wan,
-and praying to herself; as indeed did many another fisher-wife, for
-they had great cause. The night was awful. I sat cowering beside my
-mother, who was rocking herself on a settle with her apron over her
-head; or now and then stole down to the beach, to where men stood
-with lanterns upon masts to show the harbour mouth to the poor folks
-at sea. Three boats, with crews pale and worn, made the land before
-the day; an hour after dawn our coble came tossing to the outside
-belt of the surf—but she was bottom upwards.
-
-In a month after this, my mother and I went to her father’s, a very
-old man, and a reverend elder of the kirk. He sent me to school to
-Dominie Buchanan, a learned carle, who by his own account behoved to
-be of the race of the great Geordie Buchanan, of whom they tell merry
-tales, which surely are idle and false, for he was a severe, grave
-man, and handled the tawse unmercifully, as his royal pupil, gentle
-King Jamie, could in his time well testify. At school I was diligent,
-and pleased master and friends.
-
-Afterwards, up to my sixteenth year, I went much a fishing in the
-boat of Saunders Draugglefute, my maternal uncle, when desiring
-to see more of my country than could be descried in our furthest
-voyages between Kirk Leslie pier and the deep-sea fisheries at the
-back of the Isle of May, I made many coasting trips, for the space
-of near five years, in the stout brig Jean Livingstone, belonging to
-Kirkaldy, during which time I twice visited the Thames and the city
-of London; plying also once each year with a great cargo of herrings
-to Antwerp, in the Low Countries. But still I wished to see the world
-further from home, and to this intent preferred rather to go on board
-the Golden Grove of Leith, as a common sailor, than to be mate of the
-Jean Livingstone, a promotion which was offered me by John Swanson,
-skipper and part owner of the brig.
-
-The reason of my coming to think of the Golden Grove was, that the
-Jean Livingstone having a cargo of goods from Yarmouth to Edinburgh,
-lay while they were delivered close by the great ship, then preparing
-at the foot of Leith Wynd for a voyage to Italy, and from thence to
-divers ports on the Moorish side of the Mediterranean sea. Now Italy
-was a land which I had long wished to behold, as being once the seat
-of that great people the Romans, some knowledge of the poetry and
-philosophy of whom, the worthy Dominie Buchanan had not failed to
-instil into me, but which I ofttimes felt with pain to be fast fading
-from my mind. Indeed, I must tell you that it is to the exertions
-of that learned man that this narrative is altogether owing, for
-he, seeing, as he was pleased to say, a more congenial soil in my
-mind for the seeds of his instructions than was presented by the
-other fisher-boys, took great pains to imbue me with a love for the
-humanities, which has not deserted me entirely unto this day. After
-much pondering upon my prospects, I therefore finally made up my mind
-to offer myself on board of the Golden Grove, which I did, and was
-accepted without more ado. My friends would have me pause and think
-of the dangers of unknown coasts, and pirates and robbers of the sea,
-but I knew Captain John Coxon, of the Golden Grove, to be a stout
-and experienced seaman, and one who was readily trusted with rich
-freights—while as to freebooters, when I looked upon the array of
-culverins, demi-culverins, and falconets ranged upon the decks, and
-also the show of carabines and patterreroes placed about the masts,
-with many stout fellows to man and wield them, I felt we could bid
-defiance to any rover who ever sailed out of Sallee.
-
-Therefore, to make a long story short, we completed our cargo,
-took in provisions and water, and, as has been said, on a fine May
-morning, I do not remember the exact day, sailed. The wind was so
-fair that by even-fall we saw St. Abb’s Head.
-
-And here at the outset of what was to me so adventurous a voyage,
-I would describe my captain and my shipmates, as well as the
-stout vessel herself, the latter being indeed a brave craft, with
-top-gallant forecastle and high poop, surmounted by three great
-lanterns; but, as the reader will shortly perceive, the Golden Grove
-and I soon parted company, and I never saw either her or any of her
-crew again.
-
-We carried the fair north wind with us all along the English coast,
-until passing through the straits of Dover, we bade farewell to
-the white cliffs. Then in two days’ time we saw upon the larboard
-bow great rocks which form the cape called La Hogue, in France,
-and passing to the westward of the island of Guernsey, sighted the
-little isle of Ushant lying off the port of Brest, where the French
-maintain fleets and great naval stores. Hereabouts the wind changed,
-veering round to the westward, and speedily rolling in upon us
-billows so vast that we could well discern that we were no longer in
-the narrow seas, but exposed to the great strength and fierceness
-of the Atlantic or Western ocean. Notwithstanding, however, we made
-good progress; the breeze was not steady but blew in squalls, making
-it often necessary to hand topsails, and raising great seething
-seas around us, over which the Golden Grove rode very gallantly.
-At nightfall, on the eighth day of our voyage, we lost sight of
-Ushant and entered into the great Bay of Biscay. The sea here runs
-exceedingly high, tumbling in to the shore in great ridges of blue
-water; but with a stout ship, well manned, the nature of the waves is
-not so dangerous as that of the short, boiling surges in the North
-Sea. And now I come to the accident which so sadly determined my lot
-for many a day.
-
-On the morning of either the 13th or the 14th of May the weather was
-squally and unsettled, and the sea irregular and high. About eight
-o’clock, looking forth to windward, I saw a great blackness in the
-sky, which I took to be the prelude of a gust of no common strength.
-At the same moment, the mate of the watch ordered the topmen aloft
-to hand the topsails, we carrying at the moment no higher canvas. My
-station was upon the leeward fore-topsail yard-arm, and as I clung
-by the man-ropes to the great creaking pieces of timber, grasping the
-fluttering canvas of the sail, I thought I had never seen a finer
-sight than the great rolling ship below, wallowing and labouring
-in the white foaming seas, which would sometimes strike her and
-pour heavy masses of clear green water in a flood over the decks.
-When we were securing the sail, the motion aloft was very great, we
-being violently swung from side to side in such wise as might well
-make giddy even the grizzled head of an old mariner. Meantime, the
-gust to windward was coming fast; the blackness increased, and a
-rushing sound, as of the chariot wheels of a host, rose above the
-rude clamour of the sea. Then, amid great showers of flying brine,
-which it drove before it, the fierce wind struck the Golden Grove
-bodily over upon her side. At the same instant, I heard a hoarse
-voice below summoning the men from the yards down upon deck; but as
-I was about to obey, the tempest grew terrible. There were great
-clouds of mist above me, through which I could see nought below but
-the white patches of waves breaking over the strong bulwarks of the
-ship. Suddenly the canvas, which had not been quite secured, was torn
-open, as it were, with a loud screech by the wind, and flapped and
-banged so that I felt the very mast shake and quiver violently, while
-I received rude blows from the loose and flying ropes, insomuch as,
-being half blinded by that and the pelting of the brine, I shut my
-eyes, and bending down my head grasped the yard firmly in my arms. I
-might have remained thus three or four seconds, when I heard the loud
-howl of the wind suddenly increase to a sort of eldritch scream. In a
-moment, the mast gave two violent jerks, and with the third I heard
-five or six sounding twangs like the breaking of harp-strings, and
-immediately a crashing of wood. Then, still clinging to the yard, I
-was hurried with a mighty rush through the air, and suddenly plunged
-down into the choking brine, which rose all gurgling over my head,
-and I knew at the same time that the Golden Grove had carried away
-her fore-topmast, and that I was overboard in the boiling sea.
-
-By instinct, I suppose, I struggled so to climb upon the floating
-wreck as to get my head and shoulders above water. Then I saw that
-I was alone in my misery. I have said that my station was at the
-outer end of the yard, and I conceive that my shipmates must have
-gained the top, and from thence, I hoped, the deck. But as for me, I
-saw nought but speedy drowning for my fate. The seas rose in great
-foaming peaks and pyramids around me, and the wind drove drenching
-showers from the crests of the waves down into the hollows. All
-around gloomy clouds passed swiftly, torn by the squall, but the
-pitchy darkness which showed where its strength lay, was far down to
-leeward, and looking thereat as I rose upon a higher sea than common,
-I faintly descried the ship in a crippled plight, but having managed
-to put her helm up so as to scud before the storm. She was already
-near a league away, and leaving me fast; so that the bitterness of
-death rose up in my very heart. For a moment I thought I might as
-well die at once, and letting go my hold of the spars, I allowed
-myself to sink backward into the sea. But God has wisely made man
-to love life with a clinging love, and to grapple with death as
-with a grim enemy. Therefore, as the water closed above me, and I
-felt suffocating, I could not help making a struggle, which soon
-replaced me on my desolate seat on the floating wreck. I looked at
-the spars, and saw that the topmast had broken only about a foot
-beneath the place to which the yard had been lowered. Nearly the
-whole of the foretop and the top-gallant masts of the Golden Grove,
-with the fragments of the foretopsail, which had been rent almost
-into ribbons, and the yard to which they were fastened lay therefore
-in the sea. I clambered in from the end of the yard, and took up my
-position where the mast and it crossed each other; making myself fast
-thereto with one of the numerous ends of broken rope which abounded,
-and for near an hour sat dismal and almost broken-hearted, unheedful
-of how the waves tossed me to and fro, or how they sometimes burst
-over and almost stifled me. I was somewhat roused by a feeling of
-warmth, and looking abroad saw that the clouds had broken, and that
-the sun was shining brightly on the sea. The wind was also abated,
-and the waves not combing so violently, I was more at ease. Then I
-heard that terrible sound—the sound of the sea alone—which no one
-who has listened to save he who has swam far from any vessel, or
-who, like myself, has clung to a driving spar. On the beach you hear
-the surf, where the waves burst upon rock or sand; on shipboard you
-hear the dashing of the billows on counter and prow; and, above them
-all, the sigh of the wind and the groaning of timbers and masts.
-But to hear the sea alone, you must be alone upon the sea. I will
-tell you of the noise: it is as of a great multitudinous hiss,
-rising universally about you—the buzz of the fermenting and yeasty
-waves. There are no deep, hollow rumblings; except for that hissing,
-seething sound, the great billows rise and sink in silence; and you
-look over a tumbling waste of blue or green water, all laced, and
-dashed, and variegated with a thousand stripes, and streaks, and
-veins of white glancing froth, which embroider, as it were with lace,
-the dark masses of heaving and falling ocean. Hearing this sound, and
-seeing this sight, I tossed until the sun got high and warm. I felt
-no very poignant anguish, for my soul was clothed, as it were, in a
-species of lethargy—the livery of despair. Sometimes only I tried to
-pray, but thoughts and tongue would grow benumbed together.
-
-Once, indeed, I was for a time aroused. I heard a sharp little
-dash in the water, and a soft quackle, as of a sea-fowl. Looking
-up, I descried beside me two ducks of that species which we, in
-the Scottish seas, called marrots; they are white on the breast
-and neck, and brown above, and have very bright, glancing, yellow
-eyes. Moreover, they dive, and use their short wings under water,
-as other fowls do theirs in flying. By the appearance of these
-creatures I knew that land was, at farthest, within two days’ sail.
-There—tilting gaily over each sea—they swam for hours, seeming to
-look at me; sometimes they would dive, but they never went far from
-the wreck, always coming up and riding head to wind, with their keen
-yellow eyes fixed as I thought upon the poor drowning mariner. They
-seemed tame and fearless—for, indeed, what should they dread from me?
-Once, in a sort of melancholy mirth, I raised my arm threateningly,
-but they stirred neither wing nor leg to flee, lifting over seas
-which would make a great man-of-war work and groan to her very keel,
-but which these feathered ships, built by God, could outride without
-a film of down being washed aside from their white breasts.
-
-The sun having attained its zenith began to descend the westerly
-skies, and the afternoon was fair and warm, the wind now blowing
-but a summer breeze. Sometimes, when on the crest of the swell,
-I looked anxiously for a sail, but I saw nought save the bright
-horizon, against which the sharp outlines of the waves rose and fell
-in varying curves and ridges; so that now again I resigned myself to
-death, and covering my face with my hands, I, as it were, moaned,
-rather than sung inwardly to myself, many verses of psalms, which,
-when I was but a little child, I had repeated at my mother’s knee.
-Meantime, I began to feel a stiffening and a heavy drowsiness over
-all my limbs and upon my soul. When I opened my eyes the heaving
-waters turned into divers colours before my sight, so that I knew
-that my brain was wandering, and that my soul was departing. Howbeit,
-a holy tranquillity came down upon me. The blue sea appeared to
-melt away, and I saw—but dimly—the green bourock and the sweet soft
-swarded links of the Balwearie burn, with the brown herring nets
-drying on the windy grass. The place seemed holy and still; the
-sun was hot, and none were stirring, and presently I knew it was a
-summer’s sabbath day, for from out the open windows of the grey old
-kirk there came a low sound of psalmody, and I heard, as it were, in
-my brain, the voices of the congregation, as they sang—
-
- “In Judah’s land God is well known,
- His name in Israel’s great,
- In Salem is his tabernacle,
- In Zion is his seat.”
-
-After this, there came on me silence and darkness, I having gradually
-fallen into a fit or trance.
-
-I was roused by rude shocks and pulls, and a confused clamour of
-voices. Opening my eyes with effort, I saw surging upon the broken
-water, close to the spars, a ship’s boat with men, one of whom—he
-who rowed the boat oar—had grasped the collar of my sea doublet, and
-was hauling me into the pinnace, in which effort he succeeded, ere
-I could well make out whereabouts I was. At the same time several
-voices asked, in two different languages, what was my name and
-country, and how I came there. Now, of both of these tongues I had
-some smattering, the one being French and the other Low Dutch, of
-which I had heard and picked up somewhat in my several voyages up the
-river Scheldt to Antwerp.
-
-I therefore, trying to muster my senses, replied truthfully that my
-name was Leonard Lindsay—that I was a Scotsman, a mariner of the ship
-Golden Grove, of Leith, wherefrom I had fallen overboard, the spar
-to which I clung having been, as, indeed, they might perceive, blown
-away in tempestuous weather.
-
-At this they consulted in a low tone amongst themselves. They were
-all seafaring men, mostly very swarthy, and tanned by the sun and
-the wind. They wore long black hair, and silver and gold earrings,
-which glanced amid their greasy curls. Only two were fair and
-blue-eyed—namely, the men who first addressed me in Flemish or Dutch.
-After remaining for a brief time beside the spars, and seeming to
-consult as to whether they were worthy to be made a prize of, they
-decided in the negative, and dipping their oars into the water, rowed
-away, the steersman narrowly watching the run of the seas, so as to
-avoid being broached-to and swamped. In the meantime, I had clambered
-from the bottom of the boat, and looking over the bows, saw, not more
-than a third of a mile from us, a bark, which appeared to be both
-small and frail to contend with such a sea. The manner of her rig was
-new and strange to me, for she carried two masts, both very stout
-and short, and above them were two great supple yards, upon which
-was spread a good show of canvas, each sail being of that triangular
-form, called by the seamen who use them, lateen. In fine, the ship
-belonged to a port on the Mediterranean coast of France, and was of
-the class named feluccas.
-
-It was necessary to approach the vessel with great caution, inasmuch
-as she rolled and surged excessively. We therefore came slowly up,
-under her lee-quarter, and a man, of very dark complexion, and the
-fieryest eyes I ever saw, jumped up upon the gunwale, and hailed the
-boat in French, but talking so rapidly, that I could make nothing of
-it. Then, a line having been thrown on board, it was made fast to me,
-and without more ado, I was soused into the sea, and dragged on board
-the felucca, where I lay panting on the deck, while the crew—very
-wild and fierce-looking sailors—amused themselves with my wretched
-appearance. Presently, however, the man who had hailed the boat,
-and who seemed to have great authority on board, came up to me, and
-putting the rest aside, said more deliberately than before, but still
-in French, and with a peculiar accent—
-
-‘You are not, then, a Spaniard?’
-
-I mustered my few words of French, and answered, that—‘I was not, but
-a Scotsman.’
-
-Without more ado, he stooped over me, and searched my pockets.
-They contained some small English coins, being groats and silver
-pennies, and also a letter, which Captain Swanson, of the Jean
-Livingstone, had written to me to Leith. The sight of these things
-appeared to satisfy his doubts, for he spoke a few words in a kinder
-tone to those about him, and presently leaving me, a man dressed
-in a tarnished livery, like a lackey, brought me a great cup of
-hot distilled waters, which I greedily swallowed, and found myself
-comforted and refreshed. Being, however, much exhausted from the
-length of time which I had passed in the water, I laid me down upon
-a heap of sails in the forecastle, and being taken but little notice
-of, thanked God, inwardly, for my deliverance, and began to drop off
-to sleep. Only beforehand, like a sailor, I observed the course of
-the ship. The wind being westerly, and she being close hauled, and
-labouring heavily to windward, I deemed, and with truth, that her
-destination must be across the Atlantic. But whithersoever she went,
-with my then feelings, mattered little; I was saved from an early
-death, and grateful for my escape, I fell into a deep and dreamless
-sleep.
-
-When I wakened it was dark night, and the first watch was set. As
-the wind, however, was now very steady, and the sea not only lower
-but regular, the men were mostly lying and dozing about the deck,
-except he that conned and he that steered. Seeing me stirring, a
-sailor presently came to me with a lantern in his hand, and, to my
-great joy, addressed me in English, asking me from whence I came,
-and the particulars of my disaster. Having shortly informed him, I
-requested that he would tell me what the ship was, which had rescued
-me, and what manner of treatment I might expect at the hands of the
-captain and crew. At first, he made as if he would put off talking of
-these matters, but as I was importunate, he asked me in turn, whether
-I had not heard of the great association of men of all nations,
-but principally Englishmen, Frenchmen, and Hollanders, who carried
-on a constant warfare with the Spaniards among the islands of the
-West Indies, and along the coast of Darien, sometimes even crossing
-that narrow neck of land, and descending with fire and sword upon
-Panama and other towns of the South Sea. To this I replied, that
-certainly I had heard of these companies, but only very partially
-and nothing distinctly, that they were, I supposed, the adventurers
-called Flibustiers or Buccaneers, and more anciently the ‘Brethren
-of the Coast.’ My new friend made answer moodily, that I should most
-probably have ample means of learning more of these Freebooters ere I
-put my foot on British ground again—‘That is,’ says he, ‘after you
-have either escaped or served your time.’
-
-These phrases naturally threw me into great trouble, and I earnestly
-asked what he signified by them.
-
-‘Why,’ he replied, ‘that you will be sold as an apprentice, or in
-other words, as a slave, to the French West India company, in the
-Isle of Tortugas, on the northern coast of Hispaniola, whither we are
-bound.’
-
-At these words I grew sick at heart. ‘Better,’ I said, ‘to have
-allowed me drown in that sea than to have rescued me only to sell me
-into slavery.’
-
-‘Not so,’ answered my companion, something sternly. ‘You are young,
-and have a thousand hopes before you. The Hand that miraculously
-preserved you this day is ever stretched out in wisdom and mercy,
-readier to help than to chastise.’
-
-At this I could not avoid looking steadfastly at my Englishman; such
-phrases being little apt to fall from the lips of sailors. By the
-light of the lantern, I saw that he was a tall and stout old man,
-with something of great grandeur, as I thought, in his high brow and
-serene eyes. He could not have been much younger than sixty-five, but
-he was still a very strong great man, with a presence and bearing
-not like those of a wild sailor who has lived, as I may say, all his
-life with his hands in the tar-bucket. After some pause he went on to
-inform me, that besides himself there was no Englishman amongst the
-crew, and that he counted upon being safely put ashore at Tortugas,
-from whence he could get to Jamaica; for, as he said, he was not
-unknown to the hunters and privateers who frequented the former
-island. In reply to my entreaties, that he would endeavour to take me
-with him, he said it was not possible; for although the captain might
-consent, yet that many of the crew were greedy low fellows, who would
-not render up a maravedi of the profits, to which, by the articles of
-the voyage, it seems that they were all in some sort and in different
-proportions entitled.
-
-‘But be thankful,’ said my comrade, ‘that you are not a Spaniard;
-for had you but a drop of the blood of that people in your veins, a
-speedy death would be the best fate you could hope for on board a
-ship commanded by Louis Montbars.’
-
-‘Why,’ said I, ‘is he so inveterate against the people of Spain?’
-
-‘I find,’ returned the Englishman, ‘that you do indeed know little
-of the adventurers of the West Indies, if you have never heard of
-one of the most noted captains of them all. He is a gentleman of
-good birth, of Languedoc in France. In his early manhood, having
-taken great interest in reading various relations of the barbarities
-committed by the Spaniards upon the ancient and inoffensive Indians,
-the inhabitants of the islands and the main discovered by Christopher
-Columbus and his coadjutors and successors, Montbars, being, like
-many in the South of France, a man of warm and fierce passions and
-feelings, made a solemn vow to God and the Virgin, that the whole
-of his future life should be devoted to the task of revenging upon
-every Spaniard who might be placed in his power the injuries received
-at the hands of their fathers, alike by the fierce Charibs of the
-islands, and the gentle Peruvians of the main. To this intent, he
-spent all his patrimony in fitting out a ship, in which he sailed
-to the West Indies, and speedily made his name so famous, and so
-terrible to the Spaniards, that they call him in their language, ‘The
-Exterminator,’ and know that they can hope for not one moment’s life
-after they come into his power. In general,’ pursued my informant,
-‘he is grave, staid, and courteous, unless his mind run upon what
-I cannot but think the sort of bloody madness wherewith he is
-afflicted. And then, indeed, and more especially when in action with
-the Spaniards, he demeans himself more like a raging demon than a
-Christian man. He has lately had occasion to visit his native land,
-and I being also in Paris on my own business, and hearing that he
-proposed to set forth again, joined him as a mariner, but to be put
-ashore after the voyage at the island of Tortugas.’
-
-This was the substance of our conversation that night After which the
-quartermaster came to me, and saying, he understood that I had been
-a fisherman in my youth, and so must needs know how to make nets;
-and that they were in want of some seine nets for use in the keys
-or small islands of the Indies, I might therefore, by making them,
-pay my passage. To this arrangement I very willingly acceded, and
-the next day had a hammock assigned to me, and set about my task of
-net-making, which was pleasant enough, pursued in fine weather upon
-the deck; although, indeed, my heart was heavy and sore with thinking
-of what was before me.
-
-I soon discovered that my Englishman’s appellation, by which he
-was known, was Richard Wright, although that was not, indeed, as I
-afterwards found, his proper name. The crew were now reasonably kind
-to me, and the more so because Wright, whom they seemed to respect,
-took me in some sort under his protection, and upon the whole I found
-myself not ill off. The Captain mixed very familiarly with the men,
-as is common on board of privateers, and sometimes he would recite
-to them tales of the cruelties of the Spaniards to the Indians; how
-in Hispaniola the numbers of these latter were reduced in fifteen
-years from a million to sixty thousand; how the Spaniards worked
-them to a miserable death in the gold mines, or hunted them with
-blood-hounds through the mountains, feeding the dogs only upon the
-victims’ flesh; how the Spaniards would often kill these miserable
-people for mere diversion, or for wagers, or to keep their hands
-in, as they called it; and how many of these white savages had made
-a vow—ay, and kept it—that, for a certain time, they would destroy
-thirteen Indians every morning before breakfast, in honour of our
-Saviour and the twelve apostles! With such relations, and all of them
-I believe to be true, would Montbars seek to stir up the deadly wrath
-of the ship’s company against the Spaniards. But, in truth, this was
-a flame which required but little fanning, it being my opinion that
-had the Spaniards behaved like angels rather than demons, still the
-great body of ordinary Buccaneers would be content to treat them
-as the latter, so long as they possessed fair towns and rich mines
-ashore, and many treasure-ships and galleons at sea. Notwithstanding,
-however, it must be confessed that there never being a nation more
-proud, cruel, and arrogant than these Spanish—at least, in all that
-refers to their American dominions—so there never was a people more
-justly to be despoiled of their ill-gotten gains.
-
-But these are considerations apart from my narrative. Our voyage was
-reasonably prosperous, the west wind having soon given place to more
-favourable breezes, and at length, but not until after many teasing
-calms, which delayed our progress, the first welcome farmings of
-the trade wind caught our sails, and we glided swiftly towards the
-setting sun, over the great heaving ocean swells and undulations,
-from whose shining sides flying fishes would leap briskly forth, and
-within which, the water being wondrously clear, we usually saw, on
-looking over the low bulwarks of the bark, swift dolphins, which swam
-round and round us, even when our ship was sailing three leagues an
-hour, and many smaller fishes, one individual of which, called by
-sailors a bonetta, about a foot long and of a reddish colour, swam
-for three days and three nights just before our cutwater, so that the
-men began, as it were, to know that fish, and used to feed it with
-crumbs from the end of the bowsprit.
-
-About the 6th of June, the weather being then very hot, with light
-breezes, we crossed the line, as it is called, not of course the true
-equator or equinox, but the tropic of Cancer. This was, according to
-the custom of the sea, a great festival on board, those who had not
-passed that way before being obliged to submit to the ceremony of
-baptism, as they call it, which was performed after the manner then
-in use amongst French ships, as follows:—
-
-The master’s mate dressed himself in a strange sort of garment,
-fashioned so as to be ridiculous and burlesque, and reaching to his
-heels, with a hat or cap made to match. In his right hand he held a
-great clumsy wooden sword; in his left a pot of ink. His face he
-had besmirched with soot, and he wore an uncouth necklace made of
-strings of blocks or pulleys, such as are used in the rigging for
-ropes to pass through. Thus accoutred, all the novices knelt down
-before him, while he favoured the shoulders of each with a smart
-slap of the sword, smearing also a great cross upon his brows, or
-sometimes over all his face with the ink. Immediately after, the
-novice was drenched with dozens of buckets of water, and the ceremony
-ended by his depositing his offering, as they call it, of a bottle
-of brandy, which must be placed in perfect silence at the foot of
-the mainmast. For myself, I underwent the mummery with the rest, and
-had, fortunately, sufficient in my pocket to contribute my bottle of
-brandy. One of the Hollanders on board told me that their mode of
-baptism was different; they either insisting upon a ransom, according
-to the station of the novice, or hoisting him to the main yard and
-from thence dropping him into the sea three several times. ‘If,
-however,’ said my informant, a simple man, ‘he be hoisted a fourth
-time in the name of the Prince of Orange, or of the master of the
-vessel, his honour is reckoned more than ordinary.’ In case of the
-ship—I speak still of the Hollanders—never having passed that place
-before, the captain is bound to give the mariners a small runlet of
-wine, which if he neglect to do, they maintain that they may cut the
-stem off the vessel. But in French and in Dutch ships, the profits
-accruing from the ceremony are kept by the master’s mate, and spent
-upon the arrival in port, in a general debauch by all the seamen.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II.
-
-OF MY ESCAPE FROM THE FRENCH SHIP, AND MY LANDING IN HISPANIOLA.
-
-
-And now, being fairly within the grasp of the trade wind, we sped
-swiftly on towards those western islands whither we were bound,
-experiencing, however, as we approached the Indies, some of the
-squally weather common in these latitudes. Such gusts soon blow
-over, but are troublesome and fatiguing to mariners, and wearing to
-ship and rigging. First comes a black cloud on the horizon, then the
-waves to windward become tipped with whitish foam. Presently the
-gust strikes with great force, the firmament being very dark and
-threatening: at the time of its greatest strength there will be a
-flash of lightning and a thunderclap or two, after which a pelt of
-rain and a sudden clearing of the sky, the squall being for that time
-over.
-
-Meanwhile, I often discussed with Wright the question of my
-deliverance. He said that there was now so much jealousy between the
-French and the English, in the West Indies, that I could possibly
-look for no other fate than being sold to serve my time as a slave
-in Tortugas; where I would be employed in field labour, such as
-the cultivation of tobacco, great crops of which are grown in that
-island. Wright’s opinion was, that I ought, in some way or other,
-to attempt an escape before being landed at Tortugas; but this was
-easier talked of than done. While all was still unsettled between us,
-‘Land’ was one day proclaimed from the mast-head. This announcement
-surprised us all, for we had not expected to see any land until we
-came in sight of the mountains of Hispaniola, which still lay well to
-the westward. However, we soon found that, either through currents
-or errors in the reckoning, we were further to the south than we had
-calculated, and that the island we saw was one of the Virgin Isles,
-forming a cluster just where the long line of windward islands which
-stretch northward from the mainland, trend away to the west. This
-discovery necessitated a change in our steering—we hauling up two or
-three points more to the northward. The next day we saw, at a very
-great distance to leeward, a long faint blue ridge rising out of
-the water, which was the mountain line of the high ground of Porto
-Rico. Towards evening, the trade wind abated, being influenced, as
-we conjectured, by the distant land-breeze, which blows at night off
-the shore, in and near these islands; and before the setting of the
-sun the weather grew wellnigh calm. It was then that one of the crew
-discovered a bottle floating not far from the felucca, and pointed
-it out to the Captain, who straightway commanded it to be brought
-aboard; inasmuch as mariners in distress often fling such into the
-sea, with letters and papers relating their sad condition. Now, on
-board the felucca were two boats—the pinnace, in which I had been
-rescued, and a little skiff, not bigger than a canoe, which, being
-hoisted out and manned by two hands, brought in the bottle. It turned
-out to be empty and of no account. Still the finding of it was a
-lucky accident for me, inasmuch as the skiff was not again hoisted on
-board, but—the weather being exceedingly fine, and we soon expecting
-to use her to help in mooring ship—left towing astern.
-
-That same night, Wright came to me and pointed her out as a means of
-escape.
-
-‘Look you,’ says he, ‘your business is to get ashore on some island
-where you will find Englishmen, and which is not entirely under
-French or Spanish influence. Now, on the coast of Hispaniola are not
-a few of your countrymen and mine, sometimes cruizing, sometimes
-hunting and slaughtering cattle. By the course we are now lying,
-we shall have to run all along the northern coast of Hispaniola,
-which we will probably approach close to, for the benefit of the
-land-breeze at night, and because the shore is bold and the sea deep.
-Provided the skiff be left towing astern, it will not be difficult
-for you to smuggle yourself into it in the night-time, and so escape
-ashore.’
-
-This advice appeared to me admirable, and threw me quite into a fever
-of eagerness and anxiety. I was in the middle watch that night,
-and how often I gazed upon the little boat—the expected ark of my
-deliverance—as she tossed upon the smooth ridges of swell, which
-glanced like silver in the bright moonlight! About nine o’clock
-in the morning the trade wind resumed its powers, and we soon saw
-rising out of the ocean, upon our lee bow, the blue-peaked mountains
-of Hispaniola. All day, you may be sure, I very eagerly watched the
-weather, fearing lest the approach of a squall would cause Montbars
-to order the skiff to be taken on deck, but the sky continued quite
-cloudless, the sun was burning hot, and the sea breeze—for such
-amid the Western Indies they call the regular daily trade wind—blew
-most refreshingly upon our starboard quarter, urging the felucca
-gloriously along. We were now fast closing in with the coast, which
-stretched in a long high range under the lee; and as we approached
-an exceeding bold promontory, called Le Vieux Cap François, I saw
-how delicious was the land, with its bright green forests—its rocks,
-rising from thick bushes and brushwood—and the great blue mountain
-peaks in the distance. Besides ourselves the ocean was solitary. No
-sail scudded before the breeze—no fishing-boat rode head to sea,
-surrounded by the buoys of her nets and lines. All above was a sky
-of dazzling and lustrous brightness—beneath was a limpid and foaming
-sea, from which arose the groves and rocks, the deep ravines and the
-green savannahs of an isle which seemed Paradise. I stood in the
-bows of the felucca, and stretched forth my arms, and prayed for the
-moment when I should set foot on shore.
-
-When I was in this kind of rapture, Wright came to me privately,
-and asked whether I was determined to make the attempt. I replied,
-I only longed for night to come. Then at his request I went below
-with him to his berth, when he showed me, all else being on deck,
-a short-barrelled musket, hid in the bedding, with a flask of fine
-glazed powder and a small bag of balls. There was also a leathern
-bottle, called a broc, well stoppered and full of water, and some
-biscuits. ‘These things,’ says he, ‘will be necessary for you, so
-that you may not want, until you pick up some comrade along shore.
-Should you not succeed at first, you must trust to your gun for food,
-and you will soon find water, of which there is abundance, fresh and
-clear.’
-
-I thanked him heartily for his goodness and foresight, for I had
-thought of nothing but how I should get ashore, not even how I should
-satisfy my hunger and thirst when I landed. But Wright was my good
-genius, and, taking advantage of our being now alone, for the deck
-was so much the more pleasant that all were there, he made me put
-on a couple of stout linen shirts which he gave me, as also a good
-jacket, such as sailors wear, and a pair of strong yet light shoes,
-like pumps. I was quite overpowered with such goodness, and could
-scarce refrain from weeping. What a poor forlorn miserable creature
-I should have been had Wright not been on board! and although I was
-nothing to him, yet had I been his son, the old man could not have
-used me with more grave and simple kindness. I told him that when he
-first spoke to me I was in great desolation and despair of spirit,
-but that now my heart was cheery and buoyant, and that I well trusted
-to see my own land again. At this his face darkened, and he heaved
-a great sigh. I went on, and said that he, too, I hoped, would end
-his days, not in these burning climes, but in the green valley of
-Hertfordshire, where he told me he was born.
-
-‘No, no,’ says he, ‘never—never! I shall see England no more. I am
-but a wanderer and an outcast, even like Cain of old, and the place
-that once knew me, shall know me no more for ever.’
-
-With this he sat himself down on a great sea-chest, and putting his
-hands to his face, sobbed aloud, so that all his great frame was
-shaken. I was much moved, and strove to take his hand. Then he looked
-at me with his large grey eyes, all dry, and, as I thought, somewhat
-bloodshot, for he could not weep, and said, ‘In a churchyard there,
-lie my fathers and my kindred, also the wife of my bosom and the
-two children of my loins, but my dust must not mingle with theirs.
-I shall sleep my last sleep in some desert wilderness, or amid the
-weeds under the sea.’
-
-Observing me much astonished, and, perhaps, somewhat frightened, for
-I thought he must have committed some great and horrible crime, he
-grasped my hand in his, till I thought the blood came, and said, in a
-low voice—
-
-‘Young man, I know not your soul, whether it loveth the gauds and the
-pomps of the world which are but vanity, or whether it would walk in
-the paths which are narrow and thorny, but which lead upwards. Yet
-I do believe you to be in spirit true and leal; and wherefore then
-should I dissemble, that if I am an outcast, it is in a holy and a
-just cause—ay, and a cause which will triumph, when the blood of the
-saints which crieth aloud is justified and avenged! Leonard Lindsay,
-I am one of those who by voice and hand did to death the man Charles
-Stuart.’
-
-This, then, was one of the regicides whom I had often heard were
-wandering about the world, being driven from their land by this
-great and justifiable deed, for so my parents taught me to esteem
-it, of the putting to death of the king. I would have told my friend
-somewhat to this effect, but he stopped me, saying, applause or
-disapprobation were alike to him; that he would help and comfort all
-his fellow-men, but that he cared not for their opinion on what he
-had done, always looking for judgment inwards to his own soul, and
-thence upwards to his God.
-
-Shortly after this we went on deck, and my first glance was astern,
-where the skiff was still towing, although the waves raised by the
-sea-breeze ran so gaily, that sometimes as they chased us, the boat,
-rising on the crest of the following sea, would seem as though she
-would be hove bodily on deck. The land was now quite close, not more
-than a mile under the lee, so that we could see a great succession of
-bays and little headlands with bushes of many sorts, and rich tangled
-underwood, creeping among and clothing the knolls and banks even to
-the water’s edge. Over these, high palms bended and waved in the
-sea-breeze, these seeming to issue from every crevice in the rocks;
-and sometimes, where a rivulet came down into the sea, the banks
-thereof being flat and soft, grew great thickets of the mangrove
-bush, a shrub which rises on bare grey stems out of the water,
-supporting whole beds of tangled and intertwisting foliage above,
-thus raising, as it were, a sort of canopy above the water. Between
-such places and the rocky headlands were often little bays, with
-narrow strips of white glittering beach, running like crescents from
-cliff to cliff, the sea breaking in flashing surf upon the shingle,
-and often sending its spray pelting among the bushes. Never, indeed,
-had I seen a more glorious coast, one so teeming with beauty and the
-riches of an overflowing nature. Involuntarily after every long and
-ardent gaze I turned my eyes upon my skiff, praying within my heart
-that nought might come to make my adventure miscarry.
-
-As the evening approached, I was so impatient that I disposed of
-the biscuits, the powder, and the ball about my person, and was for
-ever going below to the berth to see that the musket was safe. The
-mariners, however, being excited and joyful, that the end of the
-voyage was nigh, gave little heed to me, otherwise my continued
-movements and feverish demeanour could not have but raised suspicion.
-In those low latitudes there is but little twilight, and half an
-hour after the sun went down into the sea ahead of us, the stars
-were shining out through the night. Meantime the sea-breeze had
-died away, and for an hour or longer we were left heaving upon the
-glassy swell, the land showing in vast dusky masses which, as it
-were, cut great spaces out of the firmament twinkling with stars, and
-the roar of the surf coming heavy and loud over the sea. Presently,
-after divers faint puffs, which caused the canvas to flap, shaking
-down on the deck great showers of dew, the land-wind, or _terral_,
-arose in its turn, balmy and sweet with the smell of the forests,
-and our lateen sails being dipped, we glided along, leaning over to
-seaward. The mid-watch came at last, and it had not been set for
-more than half an hour, ere the men dropped to sleep, under the lee
-of the bulwarks, excepting the steersman, and he leaned heavily and
-drowsily over the tiller. Then I brought on deck the musket and the
-broc, depositing them in safe places. But the question was how to
-get on board the skiff so as to elude the notice of the sailor who
-steered. Having soon devised a plan, I communicated it to Wright, who
-did not hesitate to put it into execution. Going aft, he stood beside
-the helmsman, and after some time, looking astern, remarked how the
-land-wind broke the usual heave of the sea into wild disorderly
-waves, and then observing that the skiff might be injured by being
-flung under our counter by the jumble of the water, he took the rope
-and hauled the boat ahead—the steersman thinking no harm—until he
-made it fast alongside, and screened from sight by the mainsail. In
-five minutes after, with a strong gripe of the hand, and a fervent
-‘God speed you,’ I swung myself noiselessly aboard, and placed the
-gun and the broc in the bottom of the boat. Wright, so I must still
-call him, then undid the rope. My hand was at that moment upon the
-smooth side of the felucca, which I suddenly felt slip by me; I was
-adrift! Holding my breath, and my hand still against the planking
-of the vessel, she glided fast and faster by me, eluding as it were
-my clutch, when her shape melted away into the run. A minute after
-and I saw the small dusky hull and white stretching canvas becoming
-indistinct in the darkness ahead. I was alone, but I was free. For
-near an hour I remained almost motionless, fearing every moment to
-hear an alarum-gun fire; but the night continued silent, and then
-with a good heart I took up my oars, and using two as sculls, rowed
-towards the coast. The land-breeze blew steadily, so I had to tug
-long and hard. At last, seeing the dusky bank close ahead, I paused
-to look for a landing-place, but none could I see. The nature of the
-coast seemed to have changed, the land hereabout being a long smooth
-wall of perpendicular rock, sinking sheerly into the sea, which
-rose and fell at the base, with a loud hissing, pouring, gurgling
-sound—not like the deep thunder of surf. I therefore set myself to
-pull eastwardly, in search of a creek or bay. I knew that the moon
-would presently rise over the land, and in sooth, in about an hour,
-I noticed the glow of her broad disc peeping over the edge of the
-cliff ahead of me, and showing it, fringed, as it were, with a line
-of bushes and brushwood, which curled over the precipice, surmounted
-now and then by one of the tall, bending palmetto trees. In about an
-hour I had moonlight sufficient to see pretty distinctly the great
-limestone ledges along which I was cautiously coasting—pausing on my
-oars, now and then, to hear the great buzz of insects and the forlorn
-cries of night-birds which floated from the land. It must have been
-near three o’clock, when I saw a black-like opening in the wall of
-cliff, and very cautiously I pulled my boat inwards. For some time I
-was in great doubt as to whether I had found a creek, but presently
-I beheld the two portals of rock between which I was, fairly astern
-of the boat, and saw and heard the white gleam of the surf breaking
-on the beach. But the former was too high for me to risk a landing,
-and I would have pulled out to sea again, but seeing another dark
-shadowy space upon the left, I made for it, hoping it might turn out
-an oblique channel leading from the main cove. I was not deceived,
-and presently the boat glided along a sort of dusky canal, with great
-rocks on either hand, clothed with rich creeping herbage; trees
-hanging over either ledge, and, as the channel narrowed, meeting, and
-by their intertwining boughs shutting out the blue sky. Below me the
-water showed as black as tar, yet sparkling, when the undulations
-from the outer creek caused it to rise and sink upon the bushy banks.
-Now and then a flutter of wings would echo in the narrow passage,
-and the loud shriek of a night-bird would drown the noise. Anon a
-scrambling, walloping sound, followed by a splash, as of a great
-animal scuttling from a ledge into the water, would ensue, and again,
-for a time, there would be deep silence. In about a quarter of an
-hour, the heave of the sea was no longer felt, owing, as I concluded,
-to the shallowing of the creek; and then, making fast the skiff to
-a great protruding branch, which I struck my head against, I rolled
-myself in a blanket which I found Wright had flung into the boat, and
-was soon asleep, being thus, as it were, safely anchored to the New
-World!
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III.
-
-I JOIN A BROTHERHOOD OF HUNTERS AND ADVENTURERS ON THE COAST.
-
-
-I did not wake until the sun was reasonably high, although but few
-rays found their way into the curious cove, which by such a lucky
-chance I had hit. It was, indeed, a sort of natural corridor or
-aisle: rocks covered with plants and bushes forming great green
-walls, with tangled trees bending from side to side, and meeting and
-interlacing above, like a roof, while the floor was limpid water.
-The air within this natural alcove was of a greenish hue, and the
-reflection from the water the same. Great numbers of gay-coloured
-birds fluttered and screamed, rather than sang, amid the boughs;
-and on almost every projecting stone by the edge of the water stood
-a great grey crane or heron, watching for the small fish which
-form its prey. After I had looked my fill, I began to think of
-breakfast; for, in order to eke out my store, I had gone supperless
-to bed. So I munched a couple of biscuits, and took a great pull at
-the sweet, fresh water. There were fruits and vegetables of many
-kinds growing near, which I feared to meddle with, not knowing
-their properties. After breakfast, I cast off from my bough, and
-paddled to and fro in the channel to seek a landing-place. This I
-was not long in discovering, at the spot where a little runnel of
-the most transparent water I ever saw in my life came trickling
-down in a small hollow, or what, in Scotland, we would call a
-_scaur_. The sides of the ravine were, it is true, very steep,
-but they were clothed with matted grass and vegetation, so that I
-could clamber up without much difficulty. I therefore made my boat
-fast very carefully, for I knew not what use she might be to me
-afterwards, and also loaded my gun and hammered the flint, after
-which I addressed myself to climb to the top of the bank. I found
-this tolerably hard work; the heat of the sun was excessive, and
-here there was no sea-breeze to refresh one. Moreover, I did not
-much like the infinity of creeping and crawling things which, as I
-made my way upwards, I startled amid the coarse grass and underwood.
-Great beetles, shining and speckled—writhing creatures, like grey
-worms, with numberless legs—horrible hairy spiders—and one or two
-small snakes, all mottled and brindled. Besides, there flew about
-me, making a tiny buzz, as if they blew small hairy trumpets, hosts
-of that accursed fly called by the French maranguinnes, and by the
-English mosquitos, which stung me until I was almost mad,—slapping
-my face and my hands, and thrashing the air with a leafy branch, but
-all in vain. At length, after great toil, I stood upon the top of the
-bank, and felt, to my joy, the cool blast of the strong sea-breeze,
-which rustled in the bushes, and soon blew away my insect enemies far
-to leeward. Then, mounting a moderate-sized eminence, I set myself
-to reconnoitre; and truly I might have deemed that I was in a desert
-and unpeopled land. Behind me rose great swelling ridges, extending
-above one another as far as my eye could reach, and all covered
-with bright green brushwood, with here and there one of the long
-feathery palm-trees standing up like a steeple over houses. Not many
-paces in front ran a long fringe, as it were, of waving trees and
-bushes, marking the extreme edge of the cliff, which sank into the
-ocean; while beyond this there stretched out the great blue expanse
-of the sea, speckled here and there with white, as the waves broke,
-but sailless, and as lonely as the land. The great mountains which
-we had seen from on board were here invisible, and even the ridges
-around, as I gazed on them, seemed to move and quiver in the great
-heat. Notwithstanding pretty humming-birds, less than Jenny Wrens,
-fluttered about, and there was a mighty chattering, as of armies of
-parrots and parroquets, which whooped and called to each other from
-grove to grove.
-
-At first, I felt a kind of sinking at being alone in this great
-wilderness, but plucking up courage, I set off to trudge along the
-coast to the eastward. The journey was toilsome in the extreme, for
-the stunted shrubs were tangled so, that I was ofttimes compelled
-to cut a passage with my clasp-knife, and the heat made my temples
-throb and ache strangely. At length, seeing great trees of prodigious
-size, the skirts of a forest, on my right hand, I made for them, and
-entering their shade, found better walking, for here was a canopy
-of leaves which warded off the sun, and also prevented the growth
-of underwood, the ground being clear, and the air cool, between the
-vast trunks of these glorious trees. However, I kept upon the edge
-of the wood, for fear of losing myself, not designing to stray far
-from the sea. Having marched thus near two hours, I heard a noise,
-which, as I came nearer, I took to be the yellings of wild animals;
-so that, somewhat startled, I looked to the priming of my gun, and
-also gazed around for a tree into which it might be convenient to
-climb. Meantime, the tumult came nearer, and I imagined it to be of
-dogs, yet it was rather a savage yelping than the deep bay of hounds.
-Next I heard a great crashing of branches on the edge of the wood,
-and making my way there, and mounting a tree, I speedily saw a huge
-wild boar, as I judged, with great tusks, and his jaws covered with
-flakes of foam, closely chased by a pack of dogs. These latter were
-fawn-coloured, with black muzzles; their legs were short, but very
-brawny; and as I heard no sound or shout of hunters, I concluded,
-with reason, that the pack before me were descendants of those
-ferocious bloodhounds brought by the Spaniards into Hispaniola, and
-other islands, to hunt down the inoffensive Indians, and which, being
-deserted by their masters, ran wild and multiplied, so that flocks of
-them assemble, and hunt the cattle and boars for their own support.
-Meantime, however, the quarry had turned to bay underneath a tree
-not far from me, and the dogs stood round in a semicircle, yelping
-at him. At length, one bolder than the rest made a spring, and drove
-his great jaws, as it seemed to me, into the animal’s flank. This was
-the signal for a general onset, and, in a moment, the boar, grunting
-and squeeling hideously, was tumbled on the ground, the ferocious
-dogs, with jaws and muzzles all blood and froth, tearing and riving
-its living flesh, so that, in the space of a very few minutes, the
-creature was not only killed, but well-nigh pulled into morsels. Then
-the dogs, several of which were hurt, and limped and whined, fell to
-and ate their fill, after which having gorged themselves to their
-very throats, they lay down to sleep. Seeing this, I concluded that
-I could with safety pursue my journey, and accordingly got down from
-the tree and did so, none of the bloodhounds molesting me.
-
-I walked until the afternoon, still seeing no sign of human life, and
-then feeling very hungry, and moreover wishing for something more
-savoury than bread and water, I looked about for game. Many green
-lizards or guanos were to be seen in the branches, and these the
-Frenchmen on board the felucca had assured me were good food, but
-I could not bring my stomach to them, and at length, after several
-unsuccessful shots, I secured a bird, nearly double the size of our
-pigeon, on which I determined to dine. Coming to a little rivulet
-of clear water, with pretty pools, nourishing the most luscious
-profusion of water-plants, I sat me down, and presently discovered a
-large duck quackling and nibbling in the herbage. Now, the flesh of a
-duck I knew, but the bird I had already killed was a stranger to me;
-so taking a very careful aim at the poor fellow, I fired and sent the
-bullet—I had no small shot—right through him. But immediately there
-rose such a loud rustling of wings, and quacking, and screaming,
-that I was confounded, until, making a few steps in advance, I saw
-that the rivulet a little above spread into a good-sized weedy pond,
-which harboured thousands of ducks, and teal, and widgeon, all of
-which flew away on hearing the report of my piece. Having recovered
-my game from the water, I set to work, plucked him, and, kindling
-a fire of dry sticks and leaves, broiled him thereon. The cookery
-was rough, but I thought the fare capital, only the want of salt
-annoyed me. Having dined, I jogged on as before, and as evening
-approached found myself exceedingly fatigued and dispirited at having
-seen no human being. When the sun went down and the short tropical
-twilight gave way to night, through which the stars blazed with a
-fiery lustre, unknown to me until I had crossed the Atlantic, I even
-began to ponder as to whether I had done well in leaving the ship
-at all; but speedily shaking off this idle despondency, I wrapped
-myself up in my blanket, which, in spite of its weight, I had carried
-strapped tightly on my shoulders, and seasoning my biscuit with a
-piece of tobacco to chew, made my supper, and slept in the fork of
-a tree, lying back not uncomfortably among the branches. I awoke
-once or twice and listened to the low hum and drone of insects, in
-addition to which a bird, as I judged, uttered from time to time a
-long mournful cry, sounding like ‘Weep, poor weel,’ which was very
-melancholy, echoing through that great midnight wilderness. Around
-me gleamed the little lights of glow-worms, called by the Spaniards
-_Moscas del Fuego_. But these extinguished their lamps in the latter
-part of the night.
-
-I was awake with the sun, at the rising of which a great white fog
-which lay upon the earth and drenched me, lifted and dispersed.
-The heat soon dried my clothes, and about nine o’clock, when the
-sea-breeze whistled through the herbage, I began again my weary
-march. Not long after, having a good view of the sea from a
-promontory, I descried almost beneath me, a ship under sail, lying
-along shore, which, the coast here tending southerly, she could
-do very well, and yet keep her sails full. She was a two-masted
-vessel, seemingly very quick, and, plunging over the breasting
-waves gallantly, soon passed me, steering to the east and keeping
-fearlessly along the rocks. I found no wild ducks to-day, but, urged
-by hunger, I shot a monkey; and although the poor creature looked
-horrible when skinned, his flesh was not unpalatable. Towards the
-afternoon, I perceived that I was approaching an indented part of the
-coast, and I saw many ravines down which I could have gone to the
-sea. Now and then, too, I would get a glimpse of such pretty, shingly
-and bushy bays as I descried from the felucca, while on the other
-hand, between the hills, there opened up vistas of great flat green
-fields, here called savannahs. I had hopes that I was approaching
-some inhabited place, and ere long I heard faint shouts before me
-and nearer to the sea. This made me push on vigorously, yet not
-without caution; and at length, forcing my way through a forest of
-stunted trees, I caught a glimpse of the figure of a man through the
-boughs. His back was to me, and I thought he was standing in a low
-tree, when suddenly a great gust of the sea-breeze came rattling in
-the wood, and the man swang to and fro with a slow motion, among the
-waving branches. Immediately a horrid thought seized me, and looking
-up as I heard a croaking, I saw two great carrion vultures circling
-in the air. Manning myself, I ran forward, and there, sure enough,
-was the body of a man hanging from a horizontal branch of a tree,
-his feet not many inches from the tops of the Guinea grass. I was
-overpowered with horror; but turning away from the terrible sight,
-what were my feelings to see two other bodies hanging in a similar
-manner! Having a little recovered my first natural fright, I looked
-attentively at these unfortunates. They were all three dressed in the
-same fashion, with coarse shirts, great jackets or doublets, cut in
-a square fashion, like the coats of the water-men on the Thames, and
-pantaloons. What surprised me, however, was the red filthy hue of the
-garments, as though they had been soaked in blood, and never cleaned
-or scoured. But then I called to mind what Wright had told me of the
-hunting dresses of the Buccaneers, and how they took a sort of pride
-in being disorderly and neglectful of their attire, never washing it
-from the blood-stains which their occupation plenteously bedaubs them
-with. The hair and beards of these men were long and matted, and they
-wore buskins of untanned hide. I looked attentively, but could see no
-gun or weapon, and the whole matter was a mystery to me. However, it
-was not a pleasant locality to linger in, so I continued my way, and
-presently saw a fine wooded bay, with winding shores, lying beneath
-me, the forest sometimes reaching into the very surf, but in other
-places leaving beaches of sand, carpeted as it were with a sort of
-creeping grass of the kind, as I afterwards heard, called Bahama.
-
-Along this bay I skirted, often stopping to look keenly about. At
-length I saw a boat or canoe, pulled by several persons, paddling
-across the smooth surface; and observing it disappear beyond a
-green headland on the opposite side of the bay, my attention was
-directed thither, and presently I noticed several columns of thin
-blue smoke rising up above the trees at that very point. I was still
-gazing at them when the sound of voices smote my ear distinctly,
-and I had scarce time to conceal myself among the thick brushwood,
-when near a score of men, some of whom wore gold-laced doublets and
-seemed officers, came scrambling down towards the water from a point
-higher up the bay than I had attained. I saw at a glance that they
-were not Englishmen, being much too swarthy; and as they passed at
-no great distance, and talked and laughed loudly, I perceived that
-their language was Spanish, the sound and accent whereof I knew
-very well. All these men were armed, each with a great bell-mouthed
-short-barrelled gun, but I observed that three carried, each of them,
-in addition, a musket of quite another shape. Seeing that they were
-Spaniards, I was in mortal dread that they might have bloodhounds
-with them, fiercer even than the wild dogs I had seen, and I drew
-my strong clasp-knife, determined that, at least, there should be a
-weasen or so cut before I was worried. Happily, however, the party
-had no dogs whatever. I held my breath as they were passing, but
-what was my consternation when the whole body stopped not ten paces
-from me, while one pointed out to the others the smoke on the other
-side of the bay. At this, two or three other of the fellows made
-gestures, by jerking their heads aside and pointing to their necks,
-as though there were halters round them, and then all laughed. But
-he who seemed the principal officer restrained them, and taking out a
-pocket compass, appeared to set, as mariners call it, the direction
-in which the smoke appeared. Then they all went on together, I
-cautiously following at a very respectful distance. Their course was
-to the outer part of the bay, and they proceeded hastily down a steep
-wooded glen, in which I lost sight of them. Presently, however, I
-heard them hailing a ship, as I conjectured; and I was right, for
-having got a little further, I heard the ripple of water, and saw
-over the trees the rigging and masts of a vessel, which I recognised
-as the same I had descried at sea early in the morning; and, getting
-a good vantage-ground, I at last looked down upon her deck, and saw
-a well-armed ship, full of men. Putting all these circumstances
-together, I soon concluded that the craft was a Spanish Guarda Costa.
-Then I thought of the men pointing to the distant smoke, and making
-motions as though they would hang the people there. In a moment I
-saw it all. The three executed Buccaneers—the three guns different
-from the rest carried by the Spaniards—their gestures at sight of
-the smoke of a little settlement! Doubtless the party belonged to a
-ship which had come upon the coast to make the usual attacks on the
-French and English settlers, and they, having caught these three
-unfortunates in the woods, had hanged them out of hand, and meant to
-attack the people on the opposite side of the bay, taking them by
-surprise. This last I inferred from the care with which a sheltering
-cove had been found to conceal their vessel.
-
-It was now my clear duty to make my way to the opposite side of
-the bay, to warn the people there, who, being enemies of the
-Spaniards, must necessarily, by the rule of these seas, be friends
-of mine. But how to get to them? I knew not how far up the country
-the bay, or lagoon, extended; to swim across would not have been
-difficult, but I thought of caymans and sharks, and my heart failed
-me. Notwithstanding, I made my way to the seaside, and sat down
-on a large rock. What would I have given now for the skiff I had
-abandoned! But then, if I had come along the coast in her, I should
-have been picked up and murdered by the Guarda Costa. So in cruel
-perplexity I sat until it grew dark. All at once I thought that if
-the three unhappy Buccaneers who were put to death belonged to the
-settlement opposite, that they would have brought a canoe to waft
-them over, which I might find along the shore. This idea gave me
-fresh vigour, and I ran eagerly along the shingle, climbing from
-time to time over points of rock which jutted out. Near two hours
-were wasted in fruitless search, wading through little creeks, and
-tracing small channels amid the bushes into which the rising tide was
-flowing, when at length, just as I was despairing, I happily found
-the object of my search. In a narrow cove, alongside a ledge of rock,
-floated a light canoe, scooped out of a single tree. I immediately
-stepped on board, and using the paddle alternately on either side,
-managed, though I was awkward at first, to make the canoe move in
-the direction I wished. Crossing the bay, I had enough to do to keep
-the land wind from blowing me out of my course, and by the time I
-was two-thirds over, every muscle in my body ached with the unwonted
-exercise. Paddling on, however, I suddenly saw on the dusky shore
-a cluster of red dim lights, by which I knew that I had opened the
-headland behind which the smoke rose, and almost at the same moment I
-heard behind a faint plash, and the rattle as of arms. I saw at once
-that I had no time to lose, if, as I guessed, the boats of the Guarda
-Costa were not far astern. Immediately I redoubled my efforts, making
-for the lights, and at the same time hailed, ‘Ho! the shore, ahoy.’
-Immediately a voice replied, ‘Is that you, Benjamin?’ When I heard
-the sounds of my own language, my heart leaped to my mouth; and,
-catching up my musket, I fired it off, shouting, ‘Look out! look out!
-the Spaniards! the Guarda Costa!’ In an instant there gleamed a great
-many little lights, as of lanterns carried by people running about
-on the beach, and I heard the clash of arms and loud hallooings;
-then the voice I had heard sang out again, ‘Where are they?—who are
-you?’ But before I could reply the Spaniards suddenly fired two
-volleys in my direction, the flashes showing two great boats, full
-of men, and rowing fast. The water near me was torn up by the balls,
-but none touched the canoe, and the fire was promptly answered by a
-small piece of artillery ashore, which echoed grandly in the hills,
-and caused a harsh concert of the wakened birds. Not willing to be
-between two fires, I paddled hard, and presently ran the canoe on the
-beach; when I leaped out and found myself in the midst of a group of
-men, all shouting and cheering in English and French, running to and
-fro, and fetching and making ready arms,—their muskets, and hangers,
-and pikeheads gleaming in the sparkle of the lanterns. Directly
-I splashed through the surf, I shouted that I was a friend and a
-Scottish sailor, and that the Spaniards were upon us; whereon they
-gave a loud shout in my honour, and in defiance of the enemy, and
-fired a straggling volley. This the boats returned briskly, and the
-Buccaneers, rushing up to their middles in the sea, cried out with
-desperate imprecations to the Spaniards to come on, swearing they
-would roast them alive on their _grilles de bois_, and taunting them
-with every infamous name, keeping up a spattering irregular fire all
-the time. However, Jack Spaniard, seeing a warm reception before him,
-hung off, keeping in the shadow of the little headland. Then two or
-three canoes were promptly manned, but the men in their eagerness
-over-crowded them, and fought amongst themselves who should go; so
-that time was lost, and meantime we heard the dash of oars, as the
-boats, having failed in their purpose of surprise, pulled away.
-
-When the hubbub was a little abated, I was asked by a dozen persons
-at once what I was; whereon I recounted that having left, I did not
-say escaped, from a French ship on the coast, I had travelled hither,
-and on my way saw the Spaniards, and guessed their intentions. Then
-I told them of the bodies I had passed hanging from trees, at which
-they raised a great clamour of cursing; for these, as I had guessed,
-were their comrades, who had crossed the bay to hunt the day before.
-Then there was a proposal to man all the canoes, and go and attack
-the Spaniards; but just as this was acceded to with a loud shout, a
-light pirogue, which it seems had been fishing down the bay, ran in
-with the news that the ship had weighed anchor directly her boats
-returned, and made all sail to sea. On this there was a great groan
-given for the cowardice of the Don, and the crowd began to disperse.
-
-At this moment a young Englishman came up to me, and asked, with
-great solicitude, if one of the Buccaneers I had seen hanging was
-light haired with yellow moustaches. I replied in the affirmative;
-on which, in words of strong passion and feeling, he swore that he
-would bitterly revenge on the Spaniards the death of Benjamin, his
-‘partner,’ as he called him, and, in short, broke out into a great
-paroxysm of grief and rage. Meantime, several of the Buccaneers
-offered me the hospitality of their huts, but my Englishman declared
-I must go to his, as he was now alone, which the rest consenting to,
-very cordially shook hands with me, and thanked me in French and
-English, and then I followed my new friend along the beach to his
-hut. There were a good many of these, irregularly placed, and beside
-several there smouldered a slow fire, making the lights I had seen
-in the bay. Over these fires there were gratings or hurdles of wood,
-and on them lumps of beef, rudely cut, drying and cooking little
-by little; great bales and heaps of hides lay about, the perfume
-exhaling from them not being by any means pleasant, and numbers of
-dogs howled and barked without ceasing. My conductor led me into a
-hut built like the others, of wood and clay, and thatched with some
-sort of thick leaf. The inside was lighted by a smoky lamp, showing
-two beds of hide with dirty blankets, and a clumsy table. There were
-shelves all round, whereon were ranged several guns, hangers, and
-long Spanish knives, with fish and boar-spears, and other weapons.
-Also I saw a mariner’s compass and some instruments for taking the
-latitude, so that I rightly guessed my host to be a sailor as well
-as a hunter. Besides these, there were strewn about, bits of net,
-canvas, bullock horns, and one or two panthers’ skins were arranged
-as coverlets for the beds.
-
-My host asked many questions about the Spaniards, while he produced
-for supper a piece of dried beef, prepared over the slow fire which I
-had seen, and which being called ‘boucan’ gave to those who make it
-the name of ‘Buccaneers.’ I found it somewhat tough, but relishing
-and wholesome. After supper, we had brandy and rum, tempered by
-water, and while drinking it very sociably, my comrade informed me
-that he was a native of Cornwall, and that his name was Treveltham;
-but that here, following a custom which was universal among the
-Buccaneers, he had changed it for a nickname, or _nomme de guerre_,
-by which only he was known to the generality of his comrades. His
-Christian appellation being Nicholas, he was called Nicky Hamstring,
-a whimsical appellation, which set me laughing heartily. He had been
-on the coast since the end of the last rainy season, and liked the
-life well. The bay on the banks of which we were, he told me, was the
-estuary of a river called Le Marmousette, and about it there were
-much wild cattle. The English and the French Buccaneers lived here
-generally good friends. ‘Not but,’ said he, ‘that sometimes when the
-rum has gone round, there is not a brawl, and it may be a stick with
-a knife; but after all the island is big enough for all, and the
-cattle are many enough for all, and so we love each other, and hate
-Jack Spaniard.’ While we were talking, we heard loud shouting and
-singing without, great roaring choruses both in French and English,
-and oftimes a Lingua Franca, which was a compound of the two, but the
-burden of all being words of hatred and contempt of the Spaniards.
-Once or twice I thought the singers would have entered our hut, for
-the door had neither lock nor bar, but they did not, and as the night
-wore on, everything became silent except the dogs, who, having been
-unloosed from their kennels to act as sentinels, growled hoarsely
-along the beach. Having drunk and talked as much as we chose, we
-went to bed, I having, indeed, been asleep all through several long
-stories which Nicky recounted of the exploits and bravery of the
-Buccaneers, my drowsiness being easily excused to my companion by the
-long journey I had come that day.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IV.
-
-OF THE LIFE OF A BUCCANEER.
-
-
-Next morning Nicky asked me to accompany him, with two others to
-guide them to the spot where their comrades had suffered, in order
-that they might bury the bodies; we accordingly set off in the canoe,
-our companions being one Jonas, as he was called, an Englishman,
-and Pierre le Noir, or Black Peter, a Frenchman from the coast of
-Normandy. Jonas was so called, owing to the great ill-luck which he
-had met with in cruising, having been twice taken, and once very
-nearly hanged by the Spaniards on the coast of Porto Rico; while once
-upon the Mosquito coast, in the expedition in which l’Olonnais, a
-famous French Buccaneer, was killed, he had been left for some months
-in a small quay or island near the Mosquito shore, eating what wild
-fruit he could get, and what birds he could catch with his hands. We
-landed in the same creek in which I found the canoe, and after less
-troublous walking than I expected, my comrades knowing the country,
-found the bodies still hanging, but already defaced by the hideous
-vultures, so as to present a horrid spectacle. Nevertheless, having
-brought shovels and pickaxes with us, we performed our task, and over
-the grave, for they all three were laid in one, we put a rude cross
-made of withies, or willow wands, and so left them to take their long
-sleep in the wilderness.
-
-Being returned to the opposite side, I rambled through the village,
-for such it was, to note the appearance of the place, and its
-inhabitants.
-
-The huts were built upon a green bank, rising pleasantly from the
-sea, the little headland of which I spoke sheltering it. Behind some
-lofty ridges, partly covered with luxuriant wood, which here and
-there had been cleared, certain small fields were marked out, these
-last being planted with a brown herb, like overgrown rhubarb, which
-they told me was tobacco. At the water’s edge was a rude wharf,
-made of wood called shingles—and several canoes and European-built
-boats lay there. While I was sauntering about, one of the former
-put off, navigated by two Indians, who spoke both French and
-English reasonably well. These Indians were better and more neatly
-attired than the whites; they were of a sallow-brown hue, had long,
-lank black hair, and very bright eyes. In person they were tall,
-raw-boned, and muscular. In the canoe they carried an assortment,
-as it were, of spears, called fizgigs and harpoons, for striking
-fish; at which exercise they are inconceivably expert, often killing
-in a forenoon what will form a good dinner for a hundred men. The
-Mosquito men, for so are these Indians called, are therefore very
-highly prized by the whites, who give them good wages to go on board
-their ships, or to stay at their settlements on shore, to provide
-turtle or manatee for the company. While I was looking at them,
-Nicky came up to me, and we walked through the village together, he
-bringing me into many of the cabins, all of which were similar to
-his own. Those of the men who were not in the mountains or savannahs
-hunting, were attending to their boucans, or fires, for the drying
-of the meat, and I thought as I saw them, working like butchers and
-cooks, that I would rather take the huntsman’s part of the business.
-All around lay the quarters of slaughtered beeves and hogs, while the
-Buccaneers, armed with long knives, cut the flesh from the bones.
-These lumps were then carefully salted in open sheds used for that
-purpose, and after being well steeped in brine, were placed on the
-boucan—that is to say, upon the grille of wood above a slow fire,
-which gradually dried and cooked the meat, giving it at the same
-time a sort of smoky taste, which however is not without an aroma to
-the palate. This method of preserving meat may be called national
-in these islands, for so did the original Charibs dress their food,
-whether fish or flesh. These savages were so fond of this cookery,
-and of such endurance, that an Indian returning from the chase,
-fatigued and hungry, would often wait patiently by the boucan, or
-as they called it, the _barbecu_, the best part of a day, until a
-fish or slice of hog, or beeve, was well cooked, the morsel being
-suspended almost two feet above a little and slow fire. The Charibs,
-being cannibals, were often in use to treat their prisoners just
-as they treated their game, and I know many who, visiting some of
-the smaller windward islands, and also the Brazilian coast, saw
-great flitches of human flesh, smoked and barbecued, hanging in the
-huts. The meat, when sufficiently preserved in the manner which I
-have described, the Buccaneers placed in storehouses, built so that
-both land and sea winds may play well around them. The hides are
-also prepared in a rude fashion, and the tallow, the whole being
-periodically sold, either for money or goods, to the captains of
-privateers for their crews, or to certain planters in those islands
-in which cattle do not abound. The latter are the best customers,
-making regular contracts with the Buccaneers for the supply of a
-certain quantity of meat and hides for a fixed sum, the stipulations
-on both sides being honourably adhered to. Many of the Buccaneers
-have servants and hired assistants, who are chiefly employed in
-conveying the cattle from the spot where they are killed to the
-boucan, and afterwards in helping to stow away the food. Although
-this appeared to be a regular settlement, its inhabitants led but a
-roving life. Many of them intended to go to sea for a change at the
-first opportunity, and others, conceiving that there were more cattle
-and fewer hunters to the eastward, spoke of shifting their quarters.
-This I heard while wandering about with Nicky, from boucan to boucan,
-and hut to hut. The scene indeed was a new one to me. Such groups of
-wild-looking blood-stained men; such slashing and cutting of meat,
-as though one were in the shambles; such shouting and singing in
-different tongues, mixed with the clamour of dogs and the screams of
-parrots, and other birds from the neighbouring groves; such quaffing
-of bumpers of brandy and constant smoking of tobacco; such an
-appearance indeed of rude plenty and coarse health and enjoyment—all
-this made a curious impression on me, and I returned to the hut
-pondering on it.
-
-‘Well,’ says Nicky, ‘will you stay with us, and be my comrade, in
-lieu of poor Benjamin? Here is his stock in trade,’ pointing to two
-good guns and a little assortment of household stuff. ‘By the rules
-of the coast, as you know, we all work in couples. Each man has his
-comrade, with whom he shares all: and when one dies, the survivor is
-entitled to his partner’s wealth and implements—the last of which I
-will very willingly bestow upon you, should you deem it meet to join
-me.’
-
-We talked for some time about the matter. My own mind was naturally
-buoyant, and my spirits easily fitted themselves to circumstances;
-and so, concluding that I would lead an adventurous life, and see
-much well worthy of being beheld, we in the end concluded a bargain;
-and then putting on a doublet which had belonged to poor Benjamin,
-and which being almost new, was but slightly smirched with blood, my
-partner summoned in several of the chief men to the hut; and they
-being accommodated with great goblets of brandy, admitted me by
-acclamation into the body of the brave Huntsmen and Buccaneers, and
-the ancient order of Brethren of the Coast, baptizing me in brandy,
-with various mummeries, by the nick-name of Will Thistle, as showing
-my Scottish nativity. Then Jonas, who was there, would fain have had
-a carouse, but they persuaded him not, saying that there was ample
-work to do, and little time to do it in, before the ships would
-arrive from Jamaica and Nevis for boucan.
-
-Behold me now, therefore, a Buccaneer on the coast of Hispaniola!
-I let my beard and moustache grow, and they and my hair, which
-was naturally luxuriant, mingling, I speedily looked as grim and
-grisly as any of them. My comrade, Nicky, was a good man and true;
-he had really felt the death of Benjamin his partner, and so had
-been at first more grave and more reserved than usual. But as this
-natural feeling wore away, he became truly a merry madcap, with a
-jest, sometimes of the coarsest, or a lusty sea-song, or a tale of
-brave privateersmen, ever in his mouth. Under his tuition, I soon
-became a good shot, and learned to break up a bull or cow most
-scientifically with the knife. Also I became acquainted with the
-various trees and shrubs, birds and beasts of the coast. I knew how
-to fell the mountain cabbage, and to roast the savoury plantain in
-the hot cinders. I could bake the mealy cassava cake, and I knew how
-to bore the Frank palm for the luscious sap which flows from the
-wounded bark. Besides, these great forests and fair beaches teem with
-infinite food. We turned the lazy turtles which we found upon the
-shore, or hunted for their eggs in the hot sand. We intercepted and
-roasted the land-crab in his annual journey from the mountains; we
-shot the guano or yellow lizard, as he whimpered in the boughs, and
-prejudice being set aside, found his flesh like that of a barn-door
-fowl; while the racoon and the monkey both formed good roasts when we
-tired of pork and beef. Then on every pond bred flocks of fat ducks,
-and, in the season, the delicious ortolan fed amid the guinea grass.
-Great hosts of pigeons built in the high trees and the rocks, and the
-bright-coloured woodpeckers afforded us many a savoury dish. For the
-sea, the Mosquito men kept us well supplied. Standing in the bows of
-the canoe, with their barbed spears poised and ready, and their keen
-eyes fixed upon the water beneath, there was hardly a fish at which
-they darted their harpoons which the next moment lay not quivering
-and bleeding in the bottom of the boat.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER V.
-
-HOW WE ENCOUNTER GREAT DANGERS, THE SPANIARDS ATTACKING US.
-
-
-I have said that the bay on which we lived was part of the mouth or
-estuary of the river Marmousette, which, rising in distant mountains,
-falls into the sea, between Port Plate, a great land-bound gulf, and
-a high cape called Point de Cas Rouge. A mile or so further up the
-country than the Buccaneer settlement, the coast was low and marshy;
-the mangroves here grew in great abundance, and divers deep channels
-of salt water ran away from the main branch of the sea, and led, some
-of them, to great open savannahs, covered with rich grass, where the
-wild cattle loved to come and feed. One day, five of us started in a
-small pirogue, which could barely contain such a crew, to seek for
-bulls and cows in these swampy prairies—a Buccaneer called Walshe,
-who perfectly knew the mangrove canals, acting as pilot. We paddled
-up alongside of the bank, and having come to the swampy ground,
-directed the canoe through certain intricate channels in the forest
-of mangroves, with the intent of coming to a bit of the savannah
-favourable for our sport, which Walshe knew. It was curious, thus
-rowing, as it were, through a submerged forest. The water beneath us
-was very deep—for we were obliged to keep in the channels by reason
-of the mangroves growing on the muddy banks—and quite transparent,
-so long as the fat black slime remained undisturbed. Over head, the
-mangroves formed a complete canopy, so that we paddled in a hot green
-twilight, looking through long vistas of this natural alcove, or else
-trying in vain to make our eyesight penetrate more than a few yards
-athwart the infinity of grey, slimy stems. At this time, the tide was
-flowing inward, floating alongside of us broad layers of thick, rich
-scum, which gradually, as it were, clung to the trees on either side,
-leaving the mid-passage clear.
-
-I, happening to be in the bow of the canoe as look-out man, amused
-myself by gazing down into the green, translucent sea, ahead of
-the ripples caused by the progress of the canoe. The channel could
-not have been less than three fathoms deep, yet I saw, as clearly
-as though there were nothing but air beneath me, the broad, moving
-leaves of great plants at the bottom, and the heaps, and coils, and
-meshes of twisted stalks, and long, serpent-like withes springing
-from the fat mud, and which waved with a slow and sickly motion as
-the passing tide stirred them. There were also great shoals of fish
-of divers kinds, which fled away on all sides as we advanced; but
-what fascinated my gaze was the appearance of a huge blue shark,
-which I could distinctly see cleaving the water about half way
-between the boat’s keel and the bottom, and keeping pace with us very
-exactly. I was in the very act of raising my head to tell what I had
-seen, when I heard a loud exclamation from Walshe, who was steering,
-and who exclaimed that there was a rope stretched across the passage.
-The words were hardly out of his mouth, when the canoe struck the
-obstacle, broached to with the swing of the tide, and in an instant
-turned over, tilting us all, with a huge splash, into the water. As
-I went souse into the sea, the vision of the horrible monster which
-I had just seen shot through my very heart and brain, and striking
-out with convulsive strokes, in a moment I clutched a mangrove stem,
-and then, almost unknowing how I did it, I swung myself into the
-tree. Turning round, I looked for my companions; two were clinging
-to the canoe, which was drifting rapidly away with the tide. Nicky,
-my comrade, was in a similar position to myself, but on the opposite
-side of the creek; but poor Walshe was struggling in mid-channel,
-vainly trying, in his flurry, to swim against tide. We both shouted
-to him to sheer to one side; but just as he was attempting to do so,
-I saw a bluish white glimmer shoot through the troubled water beneath
-him, and at that moment, the poor fellow gave such an unearthly yell,
-that the woods echoed, flinging his arms about, and dashing the water
-into a foam, in the midst of which he disappeared, his cry ending in
-a loud, choking gurgle. Then there rose and rolled a great smooth,
-boiling wave, tinged with blood, as the shark, having secured his
-prey, turned again on his belly, and dived into the deep water. Nicky
-and I sat looking at each other for near the space of ten minutes
-without uttering a syllable. Then we began, I know not why, to talk
-in low whispers, and to consult upon our own situation. Our hope was,
-that the two hunters, who had stuck by the canoe, would be able to
-right it, and return for us, and so, joining our voices, we shouted
-loud and long, but the only answer which came back was the clamour of
-parrots and other birds, and the hissing sound of the water pouring
-between the slimy mangrove stems. We had no fire-arms, they having
-gone to the bottom when the canoe upset; so, having shouted ourselves
-hoarse, we had nothing for it but painfully to converse with each
-other. Our discourse turned upon the cause of our mishap. The rope
-was, by this time, far beneath the water, but we could observe the
-tremor of the two stout mangroves to which it was attached. It was
-Nicky’s opinion that there were Spaniards upon the coast, and that we
-had fallen into one of their traps—they being aware that we sometimes
-used these canals to paddle to the savannahs, and return with the ebb
-of the tide. ‘If so,’ said my comrade, ‘we shall not be left long
-here, and shall come by a fate not much better than that of poor Sam
-Walshe.’ I inquired if there was no hope of escape at low water,
-when we might wade through the water to firm ground; but my comrade
-replied, that unless we were giants, we could hope nothing from that.
-Neither would it be practicable to clamber shorewards from tree to
-tree, on account of the great multiplicity of canals and passages
-which traverse the mangroves, the smaller of which harboured caymans
-in their muddy depths. ‘No, no,’ concluded Nicky, ‘we can do nothing;
-we must wait and take our chance.’
-
-Presently the tide began silently to ebb, and in due time it left the
-marsh bare. But, oh! what a dismal spectacle that was! Everywhere
-fat banks of black mud, nourishing everlasting mangroves, the obscene
-slime here piled up in great rotting masses, there smooth in beds,
-from which bubbles of impure air would come bursting to the surface,
-and sending up hideous smells of putrefaction. The air, indeed,
-became as the air of a pest-house. Dank vapours began to roll amid
-the trees, a sort of seething steam boiled up from the pools and
-canals, and by night-time a wet grey fog, which was as the very
-breath of fever, brooded all through the marsh. The night wind was
-hardly felt amid these woody solitudes; and if a gust sometimes swept
-by us, it only brought the unwholesome vapour in fresh supplies. From
-time to time, we called to each other. Nicky recommended me to keep
-the collar of my doublet between my teeth, so as to breathe through
-the stuff, but we suffered terribly from hunger. With the morning,
-the fog lifted, and the tide, which had of course flowed and ebbed
-during the night, began to flow again. Still, there was no appearance
-of relief. We would even have welcomed the arrival of the Spaniards,
-but not an oar or paddle-splash broke the terrible silence. We were
-both, I think, falling into a sort of stupor, when Nicky suddenly
-shouted to me.
-
-‘There—see, there!’ he cried; ‘down the channel!’
-
-I looked, and lo! our canoe, still floating on her side and full of
-water, was coming drifting up, rubbing the mangrove stems, on my side
-of the channel.
-
-‘Now or never, Will Thistle!’ cried Nicky. ‘This is life or death!
-Catch her as she passes!’
-
-I roused all my strength, and slipped down from the fork, where I
-had been sitting, until my legs were in the water. The canoe drifted
-close in, and I had no difficulty in catching the rope, which yet
-hung from her bow, and making it fast to a tree. At this Nicky gave
-a great hurrah, and slipping from his perch, swam boldly across
-the deep water, having grasped my hand before I was aware of his
-proximity. ‘Here,’ says he, ‘let me right the boat, a Mosquito man
-taught me the art.’ And, sure enough, in a minute or two the canoe
-was swimming properly, only still half full of water. This, however,
-we speedily baled with our hats, and getting into the canoe, found
-it none the worse. By good chance a couple of spare paddles had
-been secured in the boat, with a piece of spun-yarn. We, being so
-far fortunate, shook hands with each other very heartily; and after
-bestowing a few sorrowful words upon our unhappy comrades, all of
-whom were indeed lost, we set ourselves to consider what was our
-best course to return again to the settlement. We could either have
-gone on with the flowing tide, and landed upon the savannah, as
-we originally purposed, from whence we could have made our way by
-land, although the journey would be toilsome, or we might return
-into the open lagoon in the canoe, and so paddle down the coast.
-This last plan we determined upon, even although to follow it there
-would be a necessity for waiting some hours, until the force of the
-flood tide had spent itself. But to wait in hope is another matter
-from remaining in despair; and so, making ourselves as comfortable
-in the canoe as we could, we tarried patiently. At length, the
-stream beginning to slacken, we pushed off, and paddled cautiously
-seaward. Coming to the spot where the rope had been stretched across
-the channel, we paused, and after some search, having found it, we
-managed to cast loose either end, although it was then near two feet
-under water, with the intention of carrying it away as a memorial
-of our escape. Hardly, however, had we got it into the canoe, when
-we heard the sound of oars and voices rapidly approaching, as if
-from the landward side. We paused to listen, hoping it might be our
-comrades coming in search of us; but presently the sound approached
-so near as to enable us to distinguish the Spanish accent of the
-speakers.
-
-‘Give way for the love of God!’ I exclaimed, tossing the rope aside.
-We both seized the paddles, but ere the canoe had got headway, a
-large boat, full of men, suddenly appeared behind us at a winding of
-the channel. At sight of the canoe they set up a great shout, called
-upon us in Spanish, French, and English, to surrender. But we only
-plied our paddles the harder, working fast to seaward.
-
-Oh, thought I, that we had not removed the rope, and then the
-Spaniards, in their eagerness, would have been caught in their own
-snare; but a minute’s reflection told me that the tide was then too
-high for the line to have stopped the pursuing boat. The chase was
-now a most eager one. True, we were tired and faint; but the sight
-of our deadly enemies nerved our arms; the paddles bent and cracked
-and the light canoe flew over the water with a speed which the heavy
-boat astern could not hope long to cope with. At this moment the
-Spaniards fired at us, the bullet flashed in the water alongside, and
-Nicky cried to zig-zag the canoe—that is, to pull her by jerks from
-side to side, out of her true course, so as to make the object a more
-difficult one to hit. We accordingly paddled in this fashion, and
-it was completely effectual: not a shot struck us. Now a ball would
-sing overhead; now one would tear up the still water alongside of us;
-but neither the canoe nor ourselves were hit, although the Spaniards
-must have fired a score of shots. Still the efforts we were making
-were too severe to be long continued; and, in spite of our exertions,
-our muscles began to flag. It was then that, ahead of us, we saw a
-bend in the channel, on the right of which grew a huge mangrove, with
-dozens of long cord-like withes depending into the water. ‘Thank
-God, we shall do yet,’ said Nicky, who knew the channel well. ‘Pull
-for the other side of that big mangrove!’ And in a moment the canoe
-glanced round the corner in question, and we were shut out from the
-view of the Spaniards. Here a small muddy creek almost covered with
-foliage, diverged from the main channel.
-
-‘I know not where it leads,’ said my comrade, ‘but we must take it.
-The strait is too narrow to row in, so we cannot be followed.’
-
-The advice was good, and the canoe speedily flew up the tributary
-creek, urged on, not only by our paddles, but a favouring current.
-This last circumstance gave us good heart, for the tide being now
-ebbing, and the current along the passage in our favour, it was
-evident that it led to the open sea. The Spanish boat had, no doubt,
-passed the outlet of the small creek without observing it, for as
-we sat silently to listen, we heard the dash of the oars and the
-shouts of our pursuers to the left, but could see nothing through
-the thicket of mangrove stems. We were about to resume our paddles
-again when the distant sound of musquetry struck our ears. We both
-listened breathlessly; volley after volley was fired, and mingling
-with it came the deep roar of culverins and other heavy ordnance. In
-a moment the crew of the boat near us, as though they had also heard
-the noise of conflict, gave a great shout of ‘Death to the Pirates!’
-for so they called the Buccaneers, and shot off their pieces in a
-loud straggling volley.
-
-‘The settlement is beset,’ said Nicky; ‘the Spaniards are on us in
-great force, and they must have been lurking in the lagoon for days;
-this explains the cowardly treachery of the rope,’ and he broke
-into loud invectives against our enemies, to all of which I most
-heartily said ‘Amen.’ For was not this attack most wanton? Here were
-we, living in a wilderness belonging to no man, killing those wild
-animals which God hath appointed to be human food, and so far surely
-performing a service to our fellows, when down come the Spaniards
-upon us out of pure arrogance and ill-blood, hanging and shooting
-our defenceless hunters, and, as we had no doubt, now attempting to
-destroy our huts and the property, for the accumulation of which we
-had honestly sweated and toiled. But such it has been ever since
-any flag but that of Spain floated in these seas. The mariners of
-many nations came naturally to enrich themselves with the produce of
-the new-discovered lands; but Spain arrogantly desired to squeeze
-in her greedy gripe the whole New World! Therefore, is it wonderful
-that we—the sailors of England, Scotland, France, Holland, and
-Portugal—should give the Spaniards fierce and eager battle? It was
-they who began the warfare; and such being the case, we paid them
-back in their own coin—usually, indeed, giving them the worst of the
-bargain.
-
-Such were the natural thoughts which passed through my head as we sat
-listening to the roar of battle, which we could hear but faintly,
-being more than a league distant from home. Presently, without
-speaking, we addressed ourselves steadily to our paddies, and it
-was not long before, to our great joy, we shot out of the dreary
-forest of mangroves, and found ourselves in the clear water of the
-lagoon. The boat which had given us chase was not anywhere to be
-seen; but we now heard the firing distinctly, for it was kept up
-very hot and constant. By this time the tide was running out like
-a mill stream, and the canoe was swept down with great rapidity
-before it. There was no wind, and the current had a glassy look; the
-air, too, was inexpressibly sultry. Great wreaths of dense vapour
-hung upon the hills, and the firmament was one louring sea of black
-clouds piled one above another, as though climbing up on each other’s
-vapoury shoulders from the horizon to the zenith. Presently the
-gloom increased to a foreboding blackness, which hung upon land and
-sea. The sounds of the birds and the insects were hushed, and in
-the intervals of the firing we heard only the low continuous rush
-of the turbid tide washing amid the mangroves. All at once a great
-flash of lightning tore, as it were, the black firmament into a
-blue gulf of flame, and at the same instant the thunder came, not
-rumbling or pealing, as I have heard it in Britain, but exploding
-with a splitting crash which seemed right above us, and which went
-through and through our ears. A quick succession of flashes and peals
-followed, so that I was almost blinded and deafened, for I had never
-seen or heard such terrible thunder or lightning; and then, at the
-recommendation of Nicky, who said that the storm would probably clear
-up with a squall, which we were ill prepared to face in the open
-lagoon, we paddled into a little opening in the amphibious forest,
-and made the canoe fast amid the trees. Here we abode for more than
-half-an-hour, the thunder and lightning continuing to be fearful;
-and the effect of each flash, gleaming down through the thick leaves
-and branches of the network of boughs above us, and lighting up with
-a grim glare the unwholesome marsh, with its slimy stake-like boles
-of trees, its long twisting withes, and its black oily pools and
-channels,—the effect of all this was, I say, very fearfully grand.
-But at length the rain began to fall; the gloom deepened, so that
-under the mangroves it was as murk as midnight; but gazing from
-beneath them to the opposite side of the lagoon, we saw dimly a sort
-of moving and rending of the vapoury clouds, and then a sudden and
-perpendicular descent upon the hills of what appeared to be countless
-streaks of mist or vapour, binding, as it were, the green earth by
-webs of watery thread to the firmament. This, Nicky said, was the
-rain, and truly we found it so; for the misty appearance spread fast
-and far, and we heard a mighty rustling sound, which became louder
-and louder, until the windows of heaven above us were opened, and
-down, not in mere drops, as it appeared to me, but in opaque sheets
-and masses of falling water, tumbled that blinding rain, lashing the
-sea as though it were smitten by rods into churning foam, and beating
-with a continuous assault our leafy canopy, until it poured through
-the drenched branches in tiny waterfalls. Meanwhile we cowered in
-the canoe dripping from every limb, and watching the weather over
-the lagoon. Before long, there was a sudden rift or opening torn
-through the veiling fog, and the perpendicular lines of the rain
-became slanting, or were broken and dispersed. At the same moment,
-we saw distant ridges which were hid and lost before in the vapour,
-now standing out clearly and rigidly in the thinning air, and Nicky
-whispered to me to note how the feathery palms were bending and
-shaking, as though great airy hands were seeking to drag them up by
-the roots. It was the clearing squall, and a few moments only passed
-away ere heavy dank puffs sighed through the mangroves with a wet,
-warm, unwholesome savour, as the steams of a caldron where masses of
-putrid vegetation were simmering, and then, driving before it a broad
-belt of tumbling foam, and whistling and hurtling through the air
-with a sound as of rushing wings and blowing trumpets, the blast came
-down from the far-off mountains and fell upon the sea. I have often
-seen more violent squalls since, I have also been afloat and ashore
-during a hurricane or tornado, but this was the first West Indian
-tempest I encountered, and I did not soon forget the great grandeur
-of the elements—the torn clouds flying in misty fragments—the blast
-whizzing through the trees, with a long loud eldritch cry—the foam
-gathered up from the sea, like the drift from the great wreaths
-of snow at Christmas on a Scottish muir—the rustling hosts of
-leaves, and rent and riven foliage scattered through the air—all
-the confusion of wild noises, the dash of the troubled sea, and the
-constant crackling and smashing of boughs and branches, torn out and
-blown fast away to leeward.
-
-In the midst of the elemental strife there shone upon the waving and
-dripping woods, and the torn and tumbling sea, a pale watery ray of
-sunlight. This was the indication that the fury of the storm was
-over. The broken clouds showed patches of deep azure here and there;
-the mists had been rolled away to sea in the impetuous currents
-of air; presently the gust lulled; the foam flew no longer about
-the water; and the birds began to cry from out the thickets. Nicky
-therefore counselled that we should again put to sea.
-
-‘The squall,’ he said, ‘must have put an end to the fight, and if
-the Spaniards be attacking our huts from their ships, which is most
-likely, they may well have been either driven ashore upon the bluff,
-or blown out to sea.’
-
-So we paddled cautiously along the edge of the mangroves, listening
-for any sound of the renewal of the combat, but heard none. It was
-obvious that, one way or another, the matter was decided—either
-that our comrades had been overpowered, or that the Spaniards had
-been forced by the weather to discontinue the attack. At length,
-we approached a point in the shore where the character of the bank
-changed—the ground heaving itself boldly above the high-water mark,
-and the mangroves ceasing to grow; a little further on, a bluff of
-limestone rock, overgrown with brush and creeping trees, and its
-base green with tangled and slippery sea-weeds, stretched out into
-the water, and from the top of this we knew our settlement was
-visible. Having, therefore, made fast the canoe in a suitable place,
-we clambered through the dripping grass and leaves to the summit,
-and there saw a piteous sight. The rock being high, we overlooked
-several small capes and bays which stretched between us and our
-late habitation, and saw plainly the green bank upon which our huts
-stood, and the pretty clear bay, with its crescent of white sand
-and shingle beneath. In this bay—with her top-gallant-masts struck,
-and top-masts and yards lowered—there lay a great Spanish ship,
-carrying not less than thirty guns, with immensely high forecastle
-and poop. Moored somewhat nearer the beach was the smaller Spanish
-ship which had already attacked us, riding also very snugly with her
-top hamper lowered; and astern of them, and ashore upon the rocky
-bluff which formed the seaward horn of our bay, was a small sloop,
-which, as we conjectured, had been driven from her moorings by the
-force of the tempest, and now lay bodily upon the rocks, the sea
-beating and breaking over her. But the piteous sight was our huts
-and storehouses—some lay in ruins on the ground, torn and shattered
-by cannon-balls, others had been set on fire, but the rain having so
-plenteously descended, had extinguished the flames, which, however,
-still smouldered in the blackened ashes and amid the charred timber,
-sending up thin volumes of bluish-grey smoke. All over the beach were
-scattered the bales and casks in which we had been used to store the
-provisions we made; and the principal of these the Spanish robbers
-were removing into the great ship; but, saddest sight of all, round
-the burning huts, and upon the shingle down to the water’s edge, were
-strewn the corpses of our late comrades, they having evidently sold
-their lives dear, for many Spanish soldiers and seamen were stretched
-out starkly among them.
-
-We long remained crouched amid the brushwood, regarding this sad
-spectacle as though fascinated by its horrors. Who had escaped? we
-thought; and, if any, where, and how? Not a man in our company but
-who was brave as the steel he wielded; but what could a handful of
-undisciplined hunters and sailors do against the broadsides of two
-Spanish men-of-war?
-
-Nicky and I looked at each other mournfully—unarmed, and fainting
-with hunger and thirst, what were we to do. Under the torments of
-the latter infliction, however, we found that we need not long
-suffer. In the hollow’s of the rocks, and the reservoirs of the large
-green leaves of divers plants, the heavy rain had left abundance
-of water, of which we drank and were refreshed. After this, we sat
-down in a sheltered nook to hold a council of war. The Spaniards
-were still busy upon the beach, and occasionally straggling into the
-woods. Boats were continually passing from the ships to our shingle
-wharf, and we saw preparations being made to warp the sloop off the
-rocks, from which we concluded that she had not been, much damaged.
-Nicky and I had hardly begun to consult upon our condition, when
-we suddenly heard the voices of men in a suppressed tone, not far
-from us in the thick underwood. As the speakers might be Spanish, we
-ceased to talk, and lay close, burying our persons, as it were, in
-the long coarse grass, and listening with all our ears. The distant
-talking continued, but in what tongue we could not tell, for the wind
-still blew in gusts, and ever and anon carried away the sound. At
-length, just as we were despairing of making out who our neighbours
-were, I felt something wet and cold glide from under my bare leg,
-and turning sharply round, I saw the grass moving, and the green
-glistening skin of a snake gliding over my flesh. Involuntarily, and
-with a great shout, I started up. ‘It is all over,’ said Nicky; ‘we
-are discovered.’ But in a moment a gruff voice hallooed—
-
-‘Who goes there?’
-
-And we both joyfully cried out in reply, that we were friends and
-comrades. Immediately there was a great rustling in the boughs, and
-running up thither we presently found a remnant of our own company,
-who grasped our hands, and could scarce speak for joy at seeing us.
-The men who thus joined us were five in number: Ezra Hoskins, an
-English seaman of Dover, called by us Stout Jem, not only for his
-size and muscle, which were prodigious, but because of his boldness
-and fearlessness of heart; then there was another Englishman, from
-Newcastle, whose real name I know not, because I never heard him
-called by any appellation but that of Black Diamond; and a Hollander,
-a sturdy slow-witted fellow, from Helvoetsluys, near the Brill, whom
-we called Meinheer; the other two persons were the Mosquito Indians,
-Blue Peter and Jack, skilful strikers of fish and manatee, and very
-attached, faithful fellows.
-
-You may be sure that we had much to tell each other of our
-adventures. First, Nicky narrated our mischance in the Mangrove
-Creek, from the devil-like snares of the crafty and cowardly
-Spaniards. And then, Stout Jem told how, in the evening of the
-previous day, the Indians being fishing towards the open sea, saw
-the sloop working up with the last of the sea-breeze, but considered
-her to be a friend, from one of the windward islands, come to load;
-and how the Buccaneers, being thus thrown off their guard, had
-hoisted lights upon the headland, to guide her after it fell dark.
-It had certainly surprised them to see answering lights, as it
-appeared, further up the lagoon, and they had set a good watch, and
-were wakeful in consequence, not well knowing what to expect. As
-the night wore on, and our canoe did not make its appearance, their
-anxiety increased, and towards morning a Mosquito man, who had been
-hunting manatee in the sedgy banks of the savannahs, came into the
-settlement, and reported that he had heard the oars of boats pulling
-in the Mangrove Channels, and that he had seen lights glimmering amid
-the night-fog. It was now evident that there was something in the
-wind, but they never reckoned on being attacked by such a force as
-came against them. Besides, the strangers might be all French from
-Tortugas, or St. Christopher’s, or Dutch from Curaçoa, and might not
-exactly know how the old settlers would relish an intrusion in their
-hunting-grounds. It was not until almost day, that our comrades saw
-a great ship coming into the bay, being towed against the land-wind
-or _terral_, which was then waxing faint, by her boats. A pirogue
-went off to her, but not returning, those on shore concluded that the
-arrival was friendly, and that their comrades had stayed on board
-to carouse, and they were only undeceived upon the rising of the
-sun, when they saw two Spanish men-of-war, besides the sloop, lying
-in the bay, and were saluted with hot salvos of artillery. Seeing
-their mistake, the Buccaneers, following their usual tactics, leaped
-into their canoes and tried to board. But the Spaniards hove great
-stones and cold shot into the boats, keeping up at the same time a
-sharp discharge of musketry, so that the canoes being broken and
-swamped, those who were not maimed or killed of their crews, were
-fain to swim to land, where they were again attacked by a body of
-Spaniards, who, with loud shouts, issued from the woods, proving how
-skilfully the whole position had been invested. The Buccaneers, being
-thus sorely discomfited, retreated into the cover of the brushwood
-and trees, and maintained a distant fight, aiming chiefly at the
-Spaniards who showed themselves on board the ships, and those who
-emerged from the seaward-side of the huts. This lasted nearly all the
-morning, when the weather becoming threatening, the Spaniards, who
-were until then held as it were in check, determined to make a great
-effort, and calling to their men ashore to take care of themselves,
-opened a great fire upon the huts, the balls crashing through and
-through them, and, at the same time, flinging fire-balls and other
-combustibles, so that presently one-half of the settlement was in
-flames, and the other demolished. Then the Dons landed in great
-force, and were met by the remnant of our comrades, who fought
-desperately. But the Spaniards having overwhelming numbers, finally
-routed them, and drove them by small parties into the woods. It was
-at the conclusion of this affray that the storm came on, and since
-its abatement our comrades had been roving along the shore, seeking
-any other survivors of the fight, but hitherto finding none.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VI.
-
-HOW THE DEADLY FEVER OF THE COAST FASTENS ON ME.
-
-
-Such was the history of the treacherous Spanish attack which
-destroyed the settlement of the Marmousette. Our first care was
-to learn how the party we had met in with were armed, and great
-was our delight to find that the Indians carried two guns apiece,
-nearly all the muskets in the village having been brought into the
-woods. Besides there was abundance of ammunition. After a short
-consultation, it was determined to take the canoe, and although our
-number would somewhat overload her, to cross to the other side of
-the bay, where we had more security against being molested. Having
-therefore carefully looked to our pieces, we clambered down the
-bank, and standing by the canoe, unanimously invested Stout Jem with
-the command of the expedition. As the Indians used the paddles most
-dexterously, they were set to work to propel us, and with Stout
-Jem for steersman, we set out. On our way I began to experience a
-drowsiness, which I had before felt, but immediately checked. Now,
-however, the sensation, amounting indeed to one of impending stupor,
-began again to overpower me. My chin fell upon my chest, and I had
-little snatches of disturbed sleep, in which curious confused ideas,
-and odd combinations of words and things, seemed to float into my
-brain, and which, when I started up again, which I would do every
-minute, fled away like phantoms, so that I could not for my life
-remember what I had been dreaming of the moment before. All this
-time I was inwardly urged to speak, I seemed to have nothing to say,
-but still something forced my tongue and lips to move, and all at
-once I called out—
-
-‘Is that a black corby on the thorn-bush near the boat’s grapnel?’
-
-At this extraordinary speech, the Englishmen in the canoe turned
-sharp round to me, and Stout Jem asked what I meant. At his voice all
-the dreamy sensations left me, and I felt myself blushing up to the
-roots of my hair, and wondering what I had said, for I remembered not
-a word.
-
-‘Here,’ said Stout Jem, kindly, ‘swallow this, my good boy;’ and he
-held me a great flask of spirits. ‘You have been breathing over-much
-marsh fog on an empty stomach, but you’ll live to pay off Jack
-Spaniard yet.’
-
-I took the flask and held it to my head, when suddenly the greasy
-leathern bottle appeared to swell and lengthen, until it seemed a
-puncheon which I held. A curious nervous feeling came crawling over
-my limbs, and my breath grew thick, and my eyes dim. The first taste
-of the brandy banished these sensations, and the cordial marvellously
-restored me.
-
-‘You must eat somewhat when we go ashore,’ said Nicky. ‘I am
-ravenous; and then we will consult on what we can do to take our
-revenge.’
-
-‘No, no; no eat,’ said Blue Peter, the Mosquito Indian; ‘sleep mosh,
-sleep good, smoke pipe, and sleep cool and long.’
-
-But I felt so much better that I fully intended to make a good
-dinner. We landed in one of the bushy coves which abound in the frith
-of the Marmousette, and which could not be seen by the Spaniards
-on the other bank. Stout Jem then despatched the Indians to hunt,
-and ordered the rest of the party to aid in building a hut. Nicky
-and myself, however, were so weak from want of food, that we were
-excused; and the Dutchman having some biscuits and smoked beef in his
-pocket, generously gave us enough to make a good meal. Meantime,
-Stout Jem, Black Diamond, and Meinheer, were actively at work. They
-had two hatchets, and their long knives, and with these they felled
-and prepared sufficient wood for their purpose, driving stakes
-into the earth, and interweaving leafy branches, with the skill of
-experienced foresters. Nicky and I were then set to work to pull
-a quantity of coarse long grass, which grew upon the beach, for
-beds; and one of the Mosquito men returning, he kindled a fire, and
-began to cook the hind quarter of a fine boar which he had shot in
-the wood. Meantime, I was plucking the grass, sometimes sitting by
-the seaside, for I felt weak and ill. The food I had eaten was no
-refreshment. My temples throbbed strangely and my skin was fevered
-and dry. Then these horrible wandering thoughts began to come again,
-and I squeezed my head with my hands, as though I could thus drive
-them out. Sometimes I thought I felt again the hot marsh vapour
-sickening the air; then the sea-breeze fanning me, I would tear the
-clothes from my chest, and put back my long dank hair to let the
-blessed cool wind play freely on me, and cool my seething blood.
-
-All at once I saw, under the shade of a genipa tree, a tall stout
-man, who stood motionless, and watched me. Deeming him a Spaniard,
-I would have shouted out, but my tongue refused to obey me, and
-turning hot and dry, rattled as it were against my teeth, while no
-sound but a low hiss could I form. Still the figure stood there;
-and now I saw a glimmer as of a naked weapon which it held. The sun
-being now setting, his rays came slanting down, and one of these
-quivering through the trees fell full upon the face of the stranger,
-and I saw that it was Walshe, with his great eyes glaring at me,
-just as they glared when the shark rose in the mangrove canal, and
-pulled him down beneath his crunching teeth. I stood trembling,
-and trying to pray. The features were livid and blue, and the eyes
-sunk and expressionless, yet horribly bright. Just at this moment
-one of the last puffs of the sea-breeze shook the trees around, and
-the sunlight falling in a different stream, and chequered by other
-branches upon the appearance, the face gradually seemed to change.
-Feature after feature melted away, until the agonized countenance of
-the unfortunate seaman was gone, and, instead of it, there remained
-the massive features and pensive gravity of my preserver on board the
-Frenchman—Wright. Just then the weapon, which I had formerly observed
-to glitter, moved, and I saw the figure heave up a great broad axe
-on one hand, and point to it with the other. It was, indeed, the
-regicide, with the emblem and the instrument of his deed.
-
-Making a sudden effort, I burst the leaden bonds which seemed to
-confine me, and with a strange courage rushed forward. As I did the
-phantom grew dim and dimmer, and when I placed my hand upon its
-breast, I felt but the gnarled bark of the genipa tree, whilst the
-axe, at the same instant, seemed to become a branch with clustering
-foliage dancing in the wind. I grew directly sick and faint.
-
-‘Oh, my God!’ I murmured, ‘I am going mad! My brain is whirling,
-and my eyes make me see things which are not and so I sank upon the
-ground, and sobbed. Presently, I was somewhat better, and I manned
-myself. ‘It is but a feverish attack,’ I thought. ‘I will return and
-try to sleep.’ It was, however, with some difficulty that I arrived
-at the hut. My limbs felt as if loaded with lead, and the pain of
-an intense headache went like hot iron wires into my brain. When I
-reached our half-finished abode, I saw everything through a sort of
-haze, and the voices at my ear appeared to come from miles away. I
-was soon placed, lying upon bundles of grass, in the windward side
-of the hut, and after that I remember little more of what happened
-during three nights and three days. Only I know that my sufferings
-were very great; that my mind appeared to ramble as though it were a
-disturbed spirit or ghost flitting all over the world. Now, I would
-seem to be far away on the pleasant coast of Fife. The sun would
-shine, and the corn rustle and the yellow broom by the burnie’s
-banks smell sweet in the summer’s breath. But I could enjoy nought.
-I was as it were seared, and the sources of pleasure dried up. I
-saw the forms of people I loved, but I could speak to none. I saw
-my mother sitting on a sandy knowe, resting her head upon her hand,
-and looking over the blue sea. But when I would embrace her, there
-came darkness and pain, and the vision vanished. Then, perhaps, in
-my delirium, I would fancy I was at sea; sometimes it was in the old
-fisher-boat, the Royal Thistle. No wind would stir, the sky would be
-glowing like a heated copper globe, and the boat would lie moveless
-as though nailed to the unstirring sea. Suddenly my father’s eyes
-would look into mine with a long wan stare, and so would we sit
-glaring at each other, like famishing and despairing beasts, while
-months, and years, and ages, would appear to come and go and bring
-no change. Anon, the mood would alter. Then I was on board the old
-brig, Jean Livingstone, with a merry breeze and a blithesome crew.
-The bonny crags of St. Andrew’s Bay would seem under our lee, with
-the ruined towers of abbeys and churches rising over the green links,
-and fading from our sight, as we worked gallantly seawards. But the
-scene would straightway change to a furious storm in a mid-winter
-night, with the foam of the sea and the snow-flakes flying together.
-Then round the light of the binnacle there would crowd ghastly
-faces, staring into mine—faces with shaggy antique beards like the
-ancient sailors of Sir Patrick Spens, long, long sleeping in the wild
-North Sea; and so surrounded by these fishy eyes of hapless drowned
-mariners, I would feel the good brig seem to founder beneath my feet,
-so that I would start struggling up from my bed of grass, crying out
-that I was drowning—that the boiling waves were choking me!
-
-This was my seasoning fever, as they called it; and, though it
-did not last long—thanks to the good treatment and the medicinal
-herbs of the Mosquito men—it left me passing weak and helpless. I
-recovered my reason all at once, as one waking from the stupor of
-deep sleep. My hair had been cut close, and my head was tied round
-with freshly-plucked plantain leaves, constantly drenched with water.
-I lay upon blankets, none of which we possessed when I was taken ill,
-and my linen was reasonably clean and fresh. The wattled hut was
-open to the breeze on every side, and as it contained but one bed
-more, I guessed that it had been given up for my use and that of my
-partner, Nicky, as indeed it had. Looking around, I saw several pots,
-pans, baskets, and boxes scattered about, from which I concluded that
-the Spaniards had departed, and that my comrades had been able to
-recover some of the wreck of their property from the ruins of their
-habitations. And this, indeed, I found afterwards to be the case.
-
-I was too weak at first to call out, and so remained in silence,
-enjoying a delicious languor, and cool and moist from head to
-foot. The fever had thoroughly left me, and I felt thankful and
-devoutly glad. Presently I distinguished the well-known smell of
-the smouldering fire of the boucan floating into the hut, and soon
-afterwards, Nicky, with bare arms and grimed hands, entered; his eyes
-sparkled when he saw me so much recovered, and presently calling the
-rest together, they all shook hands with me, and told me to be of
-good cheer, for I had fore-reached on the marsh fever, and would soon
-be quite hearty. And so, indeed, it was. I grew very hungry, and,
-being well fed, regained my strength fast, so that, two or three days
-after the fever left my blood, I was abroad sniffing the cool breezes
-of the sea.
-
-Except two men—both French—who had joined when I was ill, none of the
-survivors of our original party had turned up; some of them had no
-doubt been made prisoners by the Spaniards, others might have started
-off along the coast to the eastward, as, indeed, many previously
-intended; but we feared that upwards of one half of our comrades
-were either captives, who would be forced to labour in the mines of
-Cuba, or had already—and the fate of these latter was more to be
-envied—died with their wounds, in front, giving battle to the Spanish
-robbers.
-
-Being little able to work for some time after my recovery, and the
-rest of the party being engaged in the usual toil of hunting wild
-cattle, and preserving the meat by the boucan, it was often my
-habit to take the canoe and proceed in her down towards the mouth
-of the bay, so as to enjoy the fresh and briny breeze which came
-from the north-west across the ocean. To make these expeditions more
-pleasant, I prepared a mast with a small lug sail, such as the canoe
-could bear, and I could manage with ease. Almost my first trip,
-when thus provided, was to the scene of the late contest. I found
-nearly every trace of a settlement destroyed. The rude jetty was
-all but demolished, and over the ruins of the shattered huts, great
-crops of luxuriant herbage had grown, from which I often started
-snakes and venomous insects, such as centipedes and scorpions, who
-delighted to make their nests in the holes and crevices which they
-found in abundance amidst the ruins of our huts. On a sweet spot of
-green-sward, under the shadow of a great spreading tree, there were
-rows of little mounds, very green. Here our poor comrades lay buried.
-The Spaniards, it seems, had interred their dead, and on their
-departure, which happened on the day after I was attacked with fever,
-all our party had gone across the bay, and laid the dead Buccaneers
-beneath the mould. Upon the bark of the great tree I was at pains to
-carve a deep cross; for, though the symbol in Europe be the mark of
-a corrupt and idolatrous church, still I felt that in the wilderness
-it might bear a truer and a wider meaning, and point out to future
-strangers that the mounds beneath the tree covered the graves of
-Christian men.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VII.
-
-THE BUCCANEERS TIRE OF THE LIFE ON SHORE, AND DETERMINE TO GO AGAIN
-TO SEA.
-
-
-Searching about the place I often discovered little matters, which
-I stored in the canoe and brought to our new settlement, such as
-axes and hammers, harpoons for striking fish, fragments of cordage,
-rope and canvas; and twice I dug up from the ruins, boxes containing
-seamen’s clothes, which were very welcome to us all; in one of these
-trunks I discovered some Spanish books, including a grammar and
-dictionary, and of these I hastened to avail myself, inasmuch as I
-saw that a knowledge of this language might soon be of the greatest
-service to me. Neither did my companions grudge that I thus applied
-much of my time to study, for none of them knew more than a few words
-of Spanish, and they were quite aware of the advantage of having one
-at least of that party conversant with that tongue.
-
-Thus, time passed away tolerably pleasantly. The season for the
-arrival of the ships expected to load with the boucan prepared for
-them at the village on the east side of the bay, having passed, and
-none of them appearing, we concluded that stragglers from our old
-company had succeeded in making their way to Jamaica, Tortugas, and
-other islands, and had informed the merchants and planters there of
-the attacks of the Spaniards, and the utter ruin of the settlement,
-adding, very probably, that they were the sole survivors of the
-massacre. It, therefore, became a question with us what to do. The
-Frenchmen were for journeying along the coast to the westward, and
-then watching an opportunity to go across to Tortugas; but Stout Jem
-told them they might do so if they pleased, but he would prefer an
-island where his own countrymen had something to say in matters, an
-opinion which the rest of the English, as well as the Dutchmen and
-the Indians, who do not love the French, joined in very cordially.
-The Frenchmen, who, to do them justice, were very good fellows, on
-this gave up their proposition and swore that they would follow Stout
-Jem to the death.
-
-‘Say you so, my boys?’ cried the Dover mariner. ‘Then so be it; and
-what I propose is this. Here be nine stout men of us, for I count the
-Indians as good as white blood. Our peaceful trade in beef and hides,
-hath been ruined by these accursed Spaniards, so I vote for the sea
-again.’
-
-This proposal meeting with a clamour of approbation, Stout Jem flung
-aloft his hat.
-
-‘We have had enough of the shore this bout, mates,’ quoth he. ‘I want
-to hear the wind whistle through tarry ropes again, and feel a stout
-ship dancing under my feet.’
-
-‘Yah, yah,’ said the Hollander. ‘We zaal be Zee Roovers once more;’
-and all the company flung up their hats like our leader, and swore
-that they would take deep vengeance on Jack Spaniard. For my part,
-I was well pleased, for I felt I was a sailor, and that I had no
-business to be following a hunter’s life ashore. I had not very much
-taste for shooting bullocks, and still less for breaking them up,
-cooking and storing them; and, although I had always cheerfully taken
-my turn to watch the boucan fire, my mind would often stray away upon
-the ocean, and I would pant for the fresh sea-breeze, and the dash of
-the foaming brine. As for my comrade, Nicky, he was that easy kind of
-going man, that he seemed to care very little whether he was on land
-or sea. He worked, ate, drank, sang and slept, and then rose merrily
-next day to go through the same routine. But Stout Jem, who was the
-life and soul, as well as the captain of our party, was a sailor all
-over. He had been many years in the Caribbean sea, was a good pilot,
-understood every current, and every indication of the weather; and
-moreover, knew by heart every buccaneering trick for easing of their
-cargoes the treasure-ships of the Dons.
-
-But before we could go to sea, we must have a vessel; and saving the
-canoe, which was hardly fit for a cruiser we were as unprovided as
-though we lived on the top of a mountain. There was nothing therefore
-for it, as we could not go in a ship to the Spaniards, but to wait
-until the Spaniards should come in a ship to us, that is to say,
-in such a small ship as we could master, and afterwards manage. We
-might indeed have not found much difficulty in entering an English
-privateer, many of whom we knew were hovering on the coast; but being
-acquainted with each other well, we preferred in the first place to
-capture such a small craft as we could man, afterwards making such
-additions to our crew as might from time to time be resolved on. In
-the meanwhile, we continued to hunt and prepare the flesh of wild
-cattle and boars, so that we should have a good stock of provisions
-when we were ready to go to sea.
-
-Being, as I have said, always fonder of water than land, I often
-induced the Mosquito Indians to allow me to go with them in their
-canoe, when they went to strike fish and manatee. Generally the
-Indians permit no one to accompany them in these expeditions, and
-if they are forced to allow a white man into the canoe, they will
-purposely miss their aim at every fish or animal they strike, and so
-return empty handed. However, I being a great favourite with Blue
-Peter, who had indeed saved my life in the fever; and losing no
-opportunity, by such petty gifts as I had it in my power to make, of
-showing my gratitude, he made no objections to my accompanying him
-and his comrade in many of their expeditions.
-
-We used to start before sunrise, Blue Peter in the bows of the canoe,
-and Jack in the stern, both paddling quickly, while I sat amidships
-in the bottom. No Europeans I ever saw can paddle so silently,
-swiftly, and surely as the Indians on the Mosquito coast. They hold
-the shaft of the paddle almost upright, never touching the gunwale
-therewith, or splashing rudely in the water. On the contrary, the
-broad part of the paddle dips as clean as a knife, and the canoe
-glides with a perfectly smooth and rapid motion, so that, did you
-not observe how fast the water ripples by, you would hardly think
-you were moving at all. When pursuing the manatee, our usual game,
-the head of the canoe was turned up the creek, to the higher banks,
-where the shore was sedgy and low, where the mangroves reared their
-dismal groves, and where, the water gradually becoming brackish and
-muddy, there is found floating and waving from the banks, the long
-narrow-bladed grass on which the manatee loves to feed. The creature
-we hunted is a harmless beast, like a great seal. It is a misfortune
-for himself that he has tender white flesh, tasting like veal, and
-that his skin makes very good thongs and straps, which the Buccaneers
-use for divers purposes. Were it not so, he might float unmolested
-in the warm muddy water, nibbling the streaming grass, as the lazy
-current carries his heavy form slowly up and down the mangrove
-canals, twinkling his little pig-like eyes, and anxiously jerking his
-great stupid-looking head, if a cayman rolls with a splash from the
-muddy bank into the river, or a squatting flock of wild-ducks rise
-with a whirr from the sedgy surface of a neighbouring pool.
-
-But the poor manatee, being good to eat, must submit to be harpooned
-and eaten. When we came to the feeding-ground which he loves, the
-Indians would paddle with double caution, and Blue Peter, who was
-the striker, would carefully examine his harpoon, and see that it
-lay convenient to his hand. The spear used for capturing the manatee
-is about eight feet long. The iron barb, a heavy and sharp piece of
-metal, is attached to the thicker end, and to the other is fastened
-a circular knob called the bobwood, round which is wound a strong
-line, one end of which is fast to the bobwood, the other to the iron
-of the harpoon. When the weapon is flung, the barb alone sinks into
-the creature’s flesh, the staff coming unloosed from the iron, and
-the line rapidly unwinding from the bobwood, as the stricken creature
-dives in its agony and fear. The Indians then paddle after the staff,
-and having seized it, gradually wear out the strength of the game,
-and kill it.
-
-I shall not soon forget the first manatee hunt I saw. We embarked at
-early dawn, and glided silently along the green shore, from which the
-mist of the night was lifting and rolling in white clouds far up the
-mountains. After long skirting the mangrove wood, we turned from the
-main channel into a narrow creek, slipping along in perfect silence.
-Listen as I would, I could not even hear the water at the canoe’s
-bow, her mould was so perfect, and so steady the strokes which
-propelled her. The drip of the water from the paddles, as they were
-lifted, alone made a slight tinkling sound. The sea-breeze had not
-yet begun to blow, and the sun came down scorchingly upon the tangled
-wood and the green water, the surface of which glanced like bright,
-clear oil. Presently Blue Peter laid his paddle noiselessly down,
-and took up the harpoon. I looked anxiously ahead. Clustered round
-the trunk of a vast mangrove, which rose up out of the water, there
-was a tangled heap of soaking grass and weeds. The kneeling Indian
-crouched as if he were a graven image of ebony or bronze, and I saw
-the floating weeds move, and heard a grinding, spluttering sound, as
-of a cow grazing. Then the Indian moved a finger of his left hand,
-which he had kept outstretched; his comrade at the stern saw the
-sign, and a peculiar sweep of the paddle sent the canoe slantingly
-towards the weeds. As she diverged from her course, Blue Peter stood
-erect, and raising his right arm, with all the muscles swelling out
-like knots and lumps of iron, darted the harpoon, as it appeared to
-me, into the centre of the moving weeds. Instantly there was a great
-splash and plunge, and the canoe rocked upon a wave, which scattered
-the floating herbage, so that I saw disappearing in the water the
-broad brown back of a creature as large as a cow. Blue Peter, the
-instant he struck, sank again upon his knees, and snatching up
-the paddle, prepared to move. Meantime I could see nothing of the
-harpoon, for it had been carried under water. The Mosquito men then
-talked to each other in their own tongue, pointing to the direction
-in which the manatee appeared to have dived, and then began to
-paddle lustily. About five minutes might have elapsed, when Blue
-Peter exclaimed, ‘Ho!—there!’ and pointed. I, looking in the same
-direction, descried the staff of the harpoon seeming to fly along the
-surface of the water, the round bobwood throwing up a foam two feet
-high. Then the Mosquito-men pulled hard in chase. I could never have
-thought that their gaunt, brown bodies had so much strength in them.
-The muscles of their naked arms and chests strained and swelled, the
-paddle-shafts cracked, and the canoe seemed at every stroke to be
-lifted out of the water. Still they did not gain upon the harpoon
-towed by the manatee, but, on the contrary, rather lost, so that
-I began to fear that we would never see either harpoon or quarry;
-but, on a sudden, the motion of the former stopped, and it floated
-tranquilly upon the water. The manatee, being fatigued, had sunk to
-the bottom, and lay there. We now paddled carefully up, and Blue
-Peter caught the staff, and began to pull upon the line. Immediately
-that the wounded creature felt the smart, it started again. I saw
-the line vibrate and stretch out in a direction abeam of the canoe;
-but, in a moment, Jack, who held the steering-paddle, swept the
-bows round in the direction taken by the manatee, while Blue Peter
-fastened the line to the prow of the canoe. There was a jerk or two,
-though not so much as I expected, and straightway we began to move
-ahead, Peter crouching in the bows, signing to Jack how to steer.
-For near a quarter of an hour did the wounded beast drag us through
-the water, sometimes so swiftly that the foam whizzed past us—anon
-changing his course so suddenly, that had not the canoe been steered
-with perfect skill, he would have dragged us under water. Then, his
-strength beginning to ebb from him fast, we hauled upon the line,
-and gradually closed with our prey, whose blood was now reddening
-the water. I pitied the poor creature, as he put his head above the
-surface, and grunted and moaned after his fashion, but he was soon
-out of his pain. Slipping alongside of the carcass, Blue Peter passed
-his long knife around its throat, and after one or two struggles and
-plunges, the manatee turned over upon its back, dead. We towed him
-ashore, and securing him to a tree, presently paddled off in search
-of more game of the same sort.
-
-But upon the whole, I better loved our fishing expeditions than the
-hunt of the manatee. The poor defenceless brute always inspired me
-with pity. There is a meekness about his face which moves one. He
-makes no attempt to turn to bay or show fight, but is slaughtered as
-unresistingly as a calf, and the haunts he loves are the muddy and
-unwholesome canals among the mangrove swamps. But in spearing fish we
-often rowed down the bay to the rocky points and ledges of reef which
-formed the outermost horns of the lagoon. There the clear, blue sea,
-white spangled by the merry strength of the sea-breeze, stretched
-illimitably out, and the everlasting surf flung aloft its clouds of
-sparkling spray, high up among the rocks, now and then giving the
-bushes a taste of the savour of brine. It was in the still pools and
-channels, formed by breakwaters of rock, that the canoe was then
-navigated. Let the sea-breeze be blowing, and the surging swells be
-tossing in, as hard and fast as they might, there was always calm
-water behind the reefs—so calm and so clear! I might think that I was
-looking into the swirlings of our trout-pool in the Balwearie Burn,
-but for the bright, jagged coral, and the strange sea-weeds at the
-bottom, and the still stranger fishes floating, as it were, in pure
-mid air, but a fathom down beneath the keel of the canoe. Gliding
-over these translucent waters, sometimes scraping the battered side
-of our skiff against the rough coral edges; sometimes receiving a
-sparkling shower of spray when a bigger wave than ordinary burst
-upon the outside reef, the Mosquito men were in their glory. Blue
-Peter stood erect in the bow, his black, flashing eyes fixed on
-the water as though he would note every scollop in the edge of the
-jagged sea-weed, or every wavy ridge on the bed of white sand, and
-his long thin fish-spear darting occasionally down into the flood
-to be straightway drawn, bending and quivering, back with a noble
-fish, writhing and floundering, impaled upon the barbs. Always upon
-these expeditions I kept a good look-out seaward, and often mounted
-pinnacles of rock that I might have the better view. Once or twice I
-saw a sail, apparently set on board a small vessel, slipping quickly
-down to the westward, or beating painfully to windward; but the barks
-were too far at sea for me to make out aught of their character or
-country.
-
-During this period of my sojourn in Hispaniola it was our custom to
-spend the evenings together in the principal hut—that which was
-first constructed, and which was of an ample bigness. Here, seated
-round a great chest, which served for a table, we smoked our pipes,
-drank pretty deep draughts of the rich palm wine, and told in turn
-stories of our lives and adventures. The hut being only wattled,
-and that very imperfectly, the strong land breeze blew through and
-through it, causing the flame of our solitary lamp to waver and
-flicker, and not unfrequently putting it out altogether. We sat
-upon bundles made of our clothes, or heaps of dried grass, and
-must, in sooth, have appeared a parcel of strange ragamuffins, with
-our faces burnt to mahogany colour by the sun; our hair and beards
-long, tangled, and matted; and our clothes, being coarse doublets
-and short jackets, cut in uncouth shapes, and often red and greasy
-with the blood and fat of the animals which it was our business to
-kill. Stout Jem, being reckoned the head and commander of our party,
-sat on a kind of settle for a throne, and the rest of us crowded as
-near the great chest as we could, the two Mosquito men excepted,
-who commonly sat apart squatted on their hams, and speaking to each
-other softly in their own tongue. Sometimes we would play dice on
-these evenings, not for money, of which we had none, but for the
-carcasses of the cattle which we had killed and flayed; but as the
-play was always fair and the dice true, it was generally found that
-no one either lost or gained much in the long run. It was, however,
-the storytelling nights I loved the best. Many of the tales then told
-were indeed very vulgar and common, and unworthy of being recorded,
-turning solely upon butcheries of the Spaniards at sea, and upon
-great seasons of debauch, after a successful cruise, in Tortugas
-or Jamaica. Not a few tales were also told of ghosts and omens,
-and such extravagances, which the superstitious nature of sailors
-causes them to believe and to hearken greedily to. I heard many such
-histories both at this time and afterwards, and I design to insert
-one here, not because I think it at all credible, but because it is a
-very good specimen of the histories of ghosts, phantoms, and other
-supernatural appearances which were current among the Buccaneers.
-This story was told by Stout Jem very solemnly, and listened to with
-no less eagerness; and in recounting it I will endeavour to put the
-matter into the narrator’s words, of which, for an uncultivated
-seaman, he had a good flow. Stout Jem called his history ‘The Legend
-of Foul-Weather Don,’ and to it I will devote the next chapter.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VIII.
-
-THE LEGEND OF FOUL-WEATHER DON.
-
-
-Stout Jem told it thus:—
-
-‘My story, mates, is a strange one, and I say not whether it be true
-or false. I heard it in the middle watch, one fine night, slipping
-down the coast of Porto Rico, and the seaman who told it to us, said,
-that when he was a boy he sailed with the man to whom the thing
-happened, in a big ship which hailed from Bristol. That the spirits
-of the dead walk the world—ay, and sail the seas—is a thing I cannot
-say nay to. I cannot tell you that I ever saw anything of the sort
-myself, but credible mariners and grave and sober men have assured
-me of things which have made my marrow creep, and the hair stand up,
-all bristling out of my flesh. Well, then, about this story. The man
-to whom the adventure happened, was by name Ned Purvis, a mariner.
-It must be nigh sixty years ago since he sailed out of the port of
-London, on a trading voyage to the coast of Guinea. Purvis was then a
-younker, there being little better than a year since he had followed
-the sea, and this was his first voyage abroad; he having undertaken
-it in the ship of his uncle, a good old man, of a mild disposition,
-and well loved of the crew. As for Ned Purvis, he was a reckless,
-ruffling blade, that cared neither for man nor devil, when his blood
-was up, and who thought but little of the glimmer of a drawn cutlass,
-or the flash of a pistol, in a quarrel. But as I told you, mates, the
-old man, the captain, was mild of speech and of heart, and greatly
-loved his nephew, and thought much of the lad’s spunk and wild
-spirit. So they sailed southerly, as became navigators, bound as they
-were to traffic for spices and rich oils and gold with the blacks of
-Africa.
-
-‘Having lost sight of England, they had prosperous winds and pleasant
-weather, and nought occurred until the seventh day from that in which
-they saw the last of the white cliffs. Then they were just moving
-through the water and no more, for the breeze was but a puff, and
-the sun going down, when all of a sudden they saw a boat with a man
-in it, so close aboard that you might toss a biscuit into her. It
-was curious, mates, that almost all the men on deck saw her at once,
-when she was, as it might be, alongside; and yet no one had seen her
-approaching. But strange as that was, comrades, it was not so strange
-as the cut of the boat, and, for that matter, the cut of the man in
-her. The stem and stern of the craft were very high, and ended in
-curled bits of carved wood. Her gunwale, too, was all carved and
-sculptured, in such a way as you may have seen the pulpits and choirs
-of cathedrals and abbeys, and such buildings in England and France,
-and the Low Countries, being very artificial work done with gravers
-and chisels.
-
-‘Ned Purvis remembered afterwards, when he saw a great Spanish
-painting of Christopher Columbus, landing on his second voyage upon
-the island of Hispaniola, that the admiral sailed in a barge, carved
-and ornamented after the fashion of that of which I am now telling
-you. And the man, mates, looked as old as his boat. He had on a high,
-conical hat, with a feather in it, and he wore a grave coloured
-doublet, of an old fashion, with slashes in the arms, and brocaded
-flowers embroidered thereon. Round his neck was a stiff ruff. He had
-red stockings, and great bunches of ribbon in his shoes. The face of
-this strange person was severe and grave. He had no moustachoes, but
-a thin peaked beard which fell over his frill. Every now and then he
-smiled with a strange, wild expression, which was that of a bitter
-sneer; and his eyes shot a sparkling light, which was stony and
-cold, and from which men turned their heads, as if by instinct. Well,
-then, the captain, when he saw this queer cruizer, seemed fascinated,
-and gazed upon him, as you may have seen small birds on the boughs
-gaze at snakes, whose eyes glitter out of the grass beneath, and
-presently the man in the boat waved his arm, as a signal to those on
-board to take him in. Well, no one stirred but Ned Purvis, and before
-the old captain could prevent him, Ned flung a rope to the stranger,
-who straightway caught hold of it and mounted on deck.
-
-‘“Where is your captain?” says he, in a hollow harsh voice.
-
-‘The old man comes forward, as pale as a corpse, and, quoth he—
-
-‘“In the name of God, what want ye on board my ship?”
-
-‘Now, at the name of God, Ned Purvis thought that the strange man
-started and shook: but he replied not, only taking the old captain by
-the hand, pointed to his boat, which was towing astern.
-
-‘“Men,” said the old mariner, faintly, “he will not be denied; get
-his boat aboard.”
-
-‘But the crew slunk together in a body, and murmured to each other,
-but put not a hand to rope or tackle. Then Ned Purvis stood forward.
-
-‘“Who are you?” said he, “and why should we take you or your boat
-aboard?”
-
-‘“You yourself asked me,” quoth the strange man; “you flung the rope;
-but for that I should have floated past you. I never come, but where
-some one welcomes me.”
-
-‘Now, at this, Ned Purvis confessed that he felt like a great sinner,
-and all the men turned round and looked first at him and then at the
-stranger. But Ned plucked up courage, and determined to give them all
-bold words. So he walked up to the stranger, and said—
-
-‘“Well, I did heave you a rope; no true-hearted mariner would see
-a man adrift upon the ocean, and not offer him rescue. I care
-little what you be. If you are our fellow-creature, we have done
-but our duty in saving you; if you be not, why, we are honest men
-here, having no crime upon our consciences, and we defy the devil
-and all his works. Come, shipmates, lend a hand, and heave the old
-gentleman’s barge aboard. It’s the captain’s orders, and orders must
-be obeyed.”
-
-‘And so, after a little grumbling and murmuring, the boat was hove
-aboard and placed between the masts. There was neither food nor water
-in her, and her bottom was as foul with barnacles and sea-weed as if
-she had drifted ten times round the world. Meantime, the stranger
-and the captain went below, and the men stood in a group round the
-cabin, but they could hear nought of what took place there, and
-presently they retired to their usual posts. Well, Ned Purvis was in
-the first watch, and when it got dark he was standing leaning against
-the main-chains, wondering at the strange event of the day, when the
-captain touched him on the shoulder.
-
-‘“Nevvy!” says the old man, “know you whom you have brought aboard
-into this ship?”
-
-‘“Why, uncle,” answered Ned, somewhat taken aback at this address,
-“ought we not to take aboard any man we find starving in a boat upon
-the ocean, more than a week’s sail from land?”
-
-‘“Ay, Nevvy,” quoth the old captain, “any man, but not any phantom;
-it is more than a hundred years since the passenger you brought on
-board this unhappy ship was a man!”
-
-‘“Do you know him, then, uncle?” says Ned; “have you ever seen him
-before?”
-
-‘“Ay, boy,” replied the old mariner; “once, when I was a youth, he
-boarded a ship in which I sailed, as he did ours to-day.”
-
-‘“And what did he?” asked the young sailor, his heart fluttering
-within him.
-
-‘“Raised storms,” said the elder Purvis, solemnly; “raised a tempest
-such as I never saw before, and had hoped, until now, never to see
-again.”
-
-‘“Then, in the name of God,” says Ned, clenching his fists, “as I
-brought him on board, I’ll pitch him overboard, and I’ll begin with
-his boat first.” And so saying, he began to make fast a tackle to the
-curled prow.
-
-‘“Hold, hold!” said Captain Purvis; “he must go by his own free will,
-or he will not go at all.”
-
-‘“But who—who, in the devil’s name, is he, uncle?” shouted Ned.
-
-‘“He is a restless phantom—a wandering, unquiet spirit,” says the old
-seaman, with his voice trembling, and his grey hair all dank with the
-cold sweat. “He was a cruel captain of Spain, who, holding a high
-command in Hispaniola, wrought great cruelties to the natives, and
-even to his fellow-countrymen, amassing thus a great treasure, which
-he buried in one of the small keys or desert islands of the Western
-Indies, to wait an opportunity of conveying it to Spain: at length
-this seemed to have arrived, and in a stout vessel he set sail for
-the treasure island; but on the voyage a terrible fever fixed upon
-him, and having partially recovered, he found his memory so gone that
-he could not recal to his mind any signs by which he knew either the
-island, or the part of it where the treasure lay. Notwithstanding,
-however, he would continue to cruize for weeks and weeks among the
-cluster called the Virgin Isles, to the east of Porto Rico,—never
-sleeping, so they said who sailed with him, but always standing on
-the highest yard, gazing wistfully for his treasure he had buried.
-At length his crew lost patience, and insisted upon returning to
-Hispaniola; at this he fell into furious fits of rage, but at last,
-they being obstinate, he swore a solemn oath that, dead or alive, he
-would sail the sea until his treasure was either found and spent,
-or placed for ever beyond the reach of men. And then, ordering them
-to put out a boat, stepped on board, and they left him floating, an
-hundred years ago, just as we found him this afternoon.”
-
-‘“But he has been seen since,” quoth Ned, after a pause, for he did
-not know what to think of this story.
-
-‘“Twice that I know of,” said his uncle, “and once, I tell you, I saw
-him, and he came on board and brought tempest with him; they called
-him ‘Foul-Weather Don’ and learned men say he must keep his oath, in
-the spirit, if not in the body, and that he will have no rest till
-the terms of it be fulfilled.”
-
-‘“So he brought bad weather, did he?” said Ned, musing.
-
-‘“For the three weeks he was on board,” says the old man, “the blast
-never lulled, and the sea ran higher than the mainyard.”
-
-‘“And what did he do all that time?” cries Ned, again.
-
-‘“He sat in the great cabin,” replied the uncle, “with his back
-against the rudder-case, and never spoke word nor broke bread.”
-
-‘“How did he leave you?” was Ned’s next question.
-
-‘“He rose one evening, just in the twilight, and ordered the captain
-to put his boat into the water, though none of us thought a boat
-would live in such a sea, and none built by man’s hand could. But
-that one”—and the old sailor pointed to the sea-worn craft, with her
-bottom one bed of weed and barnacles—“but that one floated like a
-duck upon the great breaking seas; and presently, with grave courtesy
-and farewell gesture, Foul-Weather Don stepped to the gangway, and
-from thence on board his skiff. We saw him once or twice rising on
-the tops of the great seas, and standing up in the boat with his
-hands clasped, as one praying; then boat and all disappeared, and we
-saw him no more. The next hour the gale broke, the sea went down, and
-we were again enabled to lay our proper course.”
-
-‘“And what is Foul-Weather Don doing in the cabin just now?” says Ned.
-
-‘“Sitting with his back against the rudder-case,” answered Captain
-Purvis; “and see—look there!” the old man added, and he pointed to
-the east, “look at that bank of clouds rising from the ocean—there’s
-the gale coming. Before midnight Foul-Weather Don will have all his
-winds blowing about him.”
-
-‘With this, mates, Ned Purvis walked away forward, and pondered long
-and deeply. The rest of the crew were whispering in groups upon the
-forecastle, and the poor old captain was standing wringing his hands
-beside the magic boat. So presently Ned spoke to two or three of the
-men, and they shook hands with him and promised to stand by him. Then
-he went down to his berth and took out a great pistol, and carefully
-examined the lock and cleaned it; afterwards he opened his chest,
-and produced from it a bright Spanish dollar; this he hammered into
-a round ball, and with it, instead of a leaden bullet, he loaded the
-pistol. So presently, armed in this fashion, he came on deck, the men
-following him by ones and twos, and marched right to the door of the
-great cabin. His uncle met him at the door. “What do you want here?”
-quoth the old man; “take my advice, and let him alone.”
-
-‘“No,” says Ned, “I brought him here, and I’ll make you rid of him;”
-and so saying, he put the old man aside, and entered the cabin. It
-was almost dark, but the light from the binnacle came down through
-the sky-light, and showed the strange passenger sitting there, as the
-captain had described, with his back to the rudder-case.
-
-‘Ned Purvis marched heavily in, and the phantom, or whatever it was,
-looked up at him, and so they remained for more than a minute staring
-into each other’s eyes. The men were watching them over each other’s
-shoulders at the door.
-
-‘“Foul-Weather Don,” says Ned at last, as bold as steel, “you’re more
-free than welcome.”
-
-The spectre took no notice.
-
-‘“I hove the rope to you,” says Ned, “and I thought I was doing an
-act of duty by my fellow-creature. But now, I hear, that there’s no
-living blood in your veins, and that you roam the ocean, bringing bad
-weather on the mariners you fall in with. That may be true, or it may
-not. If not, say so, and say who you are. If you be a shipwrecked
-man, you are welcome here; but if not, men have told me that a silver
-bullet can wound even a ghost, and if you do not speak in time, by
-God, there is a rare chance now of testing the truth of the saying.
-Answer!”
-
-‘And Ned cocked the great pistol and levelled at the strange
-passenger. The figure never moved a muscle of its wan stern face.
-
-‘“Take the dollar and my blessing with it, then,” shouted Ned, and he
-drew the trigger.
-
-‘The pistol exploded, and for a moment the cabin was so full of
-smoke, that they could not see what execution had been done. When the
-vapour cleared a little off, Foul-Weather Don was standing up, his
-stony eyes giving out their cold sparkle, more horribly than ever.
-
-‘“You gave me your benison,” he screeched out, “I give you my
-malison; and the executors and the tokens of it will follow you night
-and day, until either my fate or yours be accomplished. If you do not
-believe me, go on deck, look over either quarter, and see if I do not
-speak sooth.”
-
-‘These, mates, were the very words of Foul-Weather Don; for I have
-got all the conversations which relate to the matter by heart, as
-they were told to me. And so Ned and the rest of them being terribly
-startled, tumbled up on deck, one tripping up the other in their
-hurry; and the first thing they did was to stare into the sea, where
-the phantom had told them to look, when sure enough they saw the
-fins of two great blue sharks, awful monsters in size, keeping way
-steadily with the ship; and just as Ned came on deck, they gave a
-sort of frisky plunge in the water, as much as to say, “There _you_
-are—very good; and here _we_ are.”
-
-‘To make a long story short, mates, before midnight, such a gale was
-blowing from the eastward, that there was nothing for it but to put
-the ship before the wind; and not only that day, but that week, and
-for three weeks after that, did the hurricane, for it was little
-else, continue, blowing the ship entirely out of her course, until
-at length, the captain and crew knew that they had sailed from near
-the coast of Africa to the coast of America, and that if the wind
-did not soon take off, they would be run plump ashore, either on
-the continent or one of the islands. Meanwhile Foul-Weather Don,
-as before, never rose from the cabin, nor broke bread nor spoke
-word. Indeed, if he were talkative, he had no one but himself to
-hold converse with; for captain, quartermaster, mates, and all,
-lived forward, and gave up the cabin to the phantom passenger. But
-Foul-Weather Don was not the only thing which stuck to the ship. The
-sharks kept way with her as steadily in the thundering gale as in
-the light breeze. The crew could see them occasionally, ploughing
-along in the troughs of the sea, one on each quarter, and keeping
-their places as exactly as if they were towing after the ship. Well,
-all hands got low and mopish. The old captain was fairly unmanned;
-and even Ned Purvis, dare-devil as he was, began to quail. At last,
-they knew by their reckoning, and by the look of the sky towards
-sundown, that they were approaching the land, and that one way or
-the other their fate would soon be settled. So one evening, the men
-were gathered in groups, watching the signs of the sky, and pointing
-out to each other right ahead the warm coloured clouds which sailors
-know hang over the land. The weather looked as wild as ever; the scud
-above flew even faster than the waves below; and you should have seen
-the battered look of the craft as she went staggering along, under
-a rag of canvas, which was becalmed every moment in the troughs of
-the sea. Indeed the ship looked almost a wreck. Her bulwarks had
-been washed away long ago, the hatchways were all battened down. Out
-of three boats she had carried, only one was left, being strongly
-lashed to the deck, while the sea-battered skiff of Foul-Weather
-Don, although there was not so much as a rope yarn to make it fast,
-had never budged for all the great seas, which had been for weeks
-rolling over and over the decks, so that the men were obliged to lash
-themselves to ringbolts, and to the masts, and never could light a
-fire, or wear a stitch of dry clothing.
-
-‘Well, as I was saying, the poor fellows were holding on as well as
-they could, and wondering where the ship and they themselves would be
-to-morrow by that time, when the two seamen, who were taking their
-turn at the helm ropes, gave a loud shout, and the rest turning
-about, saw Foul-Weather Don standing upon the deck.
-
-‘“He’s going—he’s going,” whispered old Captain Purvis. “The Lord
-hath preserved us in his great goodness.”
-
-‘Well, Foul-Weather Don looked eagerly about as if he expected to
-find his treasure island, and then he mounted the rigging—all the
-crew holding their breath and watching him—and gazed from the maintop
-long and sadly. At length, he made a sort of motion of despair, and
-came down to the deck, where he stood wringing his hands. All at
-once he turned to Captain Purvis, and motioned for his boat to be
-hoisted into the sea. In a minute, mates, the tackles were manned,
-and they let the skiff go smash into the water, with a surge that
-would have burst another boat into staves. But only the devil, mates,
-could swamp a craft like that; she floated alongside as light as a
-well-corked bottle.
-
-‘“Haul your wind, when the elements will allow you,” says the Don,
-quite solemnly.
-
-‘“Thank you for nothing,” quoth Ned Purvis. “I should think we would,
-when you have brought us across the ocean against our will.”
-
-‘But the spectre replied not a word, and seemed to glide rather
-than to clamber over the ship’s side into the boat. When he was
-fairly aboard, Ned Purvis bellowed out, “Take your sharks with
-you, Foul-Weather Don, they are fitter companions for you than for
-Christians.”
-
-‘But there was no reply, and in a minute the phantom and his boat
-glanced away from the ship’s side, and the last the crew saw of
-her was a black speck with a figure in it, in the very crest of a
-breaking wave. Just as this happened, and they were beginning to
-breathe freely, one of the men shouted “Land!” and sure enough the
-next time they rose upon a sea, they saw right in the glare of the
-setting sun the dusky coast line of an island. In an hour after,
-the gale broke, lulling fast, so that before midnight they had
-courses and stay-sails on the ship, she lying-to with her head to the
-eastward. You know, mates, that in hot countries it is up wind, up
-sea, down wind, down sea, so that by sunrise the next day there was
-nothing but a great smooth swell to show that a gale had just swept
-across the wide Atlantic. The first thing Ned Purvis did when he came
-on deck to take the morning watch, was to look over the quarter, and
-he confessed afterwards that his heart felt sick when he saw the two
-blue sharks still alongside swimming close to the surface. The other
-seamen saw the creatures too, and they looked at Ned, and whispered
-among themselves.
-
-‘Well, you may be sure that, after such a run as the ship had had
-across the Atlantic, she wanted refitting, and the crew wanted
-vegetable food, and rest; so that when the usual trade wind came to
-blow, and they found from one or two fishing canoes that they were
-amongst the most northern of the Windward islands, they cruised
-about, looking for a convenient beach to land at, and to refresh
-themselves. All this time, mates, the sharks kept their places as
-steadily as the very masts. Ned fished for them in vain. He even
-baited the hook with the choicest pieces of pork and beef aboard, but
-they would not as much as push the morsel with their snouts. “No,
-no,” said the men, when they saw this; “the creatures have their
-orders, and they obey them.” Then Ned tried the harpoon, but though
-he had often speared porpoises and dolphins, he could not make a hit
-at the sharks; either the ship lifted or lurched, or the ravenous
-animals glided aside, or the water made the spear glance; but,
-however it was, Ned confessed that he could not even scratch their
-dingy backs.
-
-‘Upon this, there was little but black looks and murmuring words in
-the ship. Poor old Captain Purvis was at his wit’s end, and the crew,
-although they used to love poor Ned, now began to look at him as
-though he were a Jonas, and Ned knew it.
-
-‘“The curse,” said the men, “is following us in a visible shape.
-There can be no good luck for ship, or crew, or cargo, with such a
-couple of attendants swimming astern.”
-
-‘Well, Ned tried hard to laugh it off, but he could not succeed, and
-his arguments were of as little avail. “Why,” he would say, “they
-can’t jump aboard, messmates; the ocean is theirs as well as ours,
-and if a cat may look at a king, I don’t see why a shark may not look
-at a ship.”
-
-‘But though he spoke in this tone, I can tell you that Ned was but
-ill at ease himself. Well, this lasted three days, and all that time
-they were cruising about among the islands, looking for a place which
-would be snug to anchor in, and out of the way of Spanish ships. On
-the third day, when the ship was about a league from a small sandy
-isle or key, the men noticed that the sharks came closer to her than
-ever, as if they were getting more and more watchful of their prey.
-This made the pot boil over, and the boatswain and three-fourths of
-the crew went to the captain in a body, and said that Ned must leave
-the ship that hour, for that he was a doomed man, and that a doomed
-man made a doomed ship. There was land close to, they said. Mr.
-Purvis would get plenty of water and provisions, and he might soon
-get his passage off in another ship, but whether he did or not, he
-must go ashore now. Old Purvis tried to argue the thing, but the men
-would not hear his words, and in the middle of the hubbub, Ned comes
-forward, frankly, and says—
-
-‘“Messmates, I have brought misfortune on the ship, and spoiled the
-voyage; I am willing to land.”
-
-‘On hearing this, Captain Purvis wished to follow his nephew, but
-they would not let him because he was the only good navigator they
-would have, after Ned went away, in the ship. So, presently, the
-remaining boat was launched, and beef, and biscuit, and water,
-sufficient for two months at least, were put in her, with a musket,
-and ammunition, and a shovel, that Ned might have the means of
-digging for water. When the boat shoved off, the sharks followed,
-on which Ned, pointing to them, shouted to his uncle to be of good
-cheer, for they would meet again, and that the ship was now free
-of bad omens. The boat landed in a little cove, and Ned stepped on
-shore with his gun in his hand. The men placed his provisions and
-the shovel upon the beach, and shook hands with him; and as they
-rowed back to the ship, they gave him a cheer for his stout heart.
-Well, when they were gone, Ned began to look around him, and truly
-he was alone in a desolate place. Most of the island appeared to be
-sand, upon which, in some places, there were great banks of Bahama
-grass growing, and about a rood from him there was a little hill,
-with bushes in it, and one very old tree at the top. What rejoiced
-Ned, however, was to see plenty of turtles sleeping on the sand, and
-numerous birds. Well, he lived here nigh a fortnight, sleeping under
-a rock in a sort of cave, which was cool and pleasant, and looking
-out in vain for a ship. All this time the sharks kept cruising along
-the shore, and Ned used to amuse himself by flinging great stones on
-them from the top of rocks rising out of the sea. One day, however,
-having climbed the little hill, and sat down under the tree, he
-observed a curious thing. The tree, which must have been dead near a
-century, and which was all covered with moss, had several withered
-branches, to which cross pieces of wood had been rudely fastened,
-but in such a way that, unless you looked very closely, you would
-have thought that such was the natural growth of the tree. But at two
-hours, or thereby, after noon every day, these branches cast shadows
-as of six crosses, all in a circle on the sand. It was after Ned
-observed this that he climbed the tree, and found that the crosses
-were artificial. Then all at once it struck him that they were meant
-for marks, and then he thought that something might be buried there.
-Well, mates, off he goes for his shovel, and sets to work at once.
-It was hot work digging in that climate, but he very soon scraped
-the lid of a great chest made of ironwood, and bound with hasps and
-clasps of metal.
-
-‘“By all the stars,” quoth Ned, “who knows but this is Foul-Weather
-Don’s treasure-chest.”
-
-‘Mates, I believe it was. Ned soon wrenched the lid off, and there
-he saw great ingots and rough lumps of gold, and precious stones,
-just as they were dug up from the mines in Cuba and Hispaniola by the
-Indians for the Spaniards. There they had lain for a hundred years,
-and no man the wiser or the better.
-
-‘“Aha,” says Ned, “I would fain have you in England, but what am I to
-do with you here?”
-
-‘However, he made shift to carry the wealth, lump by lump, down to
-his cave near the sea; then he brought the box, and stowed the gold
-as before, covering all over with loose sand. The very next morning,
-mates, Ned, on awaking, saw a small bark—he did not know what she
-was—becalmed, not a mile from the shore, waiting for the sea-breeze.
-So he mounted a rock, fired his gun, waved a handkerchief, and
-shouted. Presently, a boat pulled off from the bark, and Ned went
-down to the cove to meet her. There were a couple of men in the boat,
-of what nation I know not, but the vessel to which they belonged
-was a turtler, from one of the large windward islands—Martinico, I
-believe. So Ned told them that he had been marooned for striking
-the quartermaster of the ship in which he sailed, and asked them if
-they would give him a passage to any port where he could ship for
-England. So the turtlers consulted together, and asked him if he had
-wherewithal to pay his passage. Upon which Ned, who cared nothing
-at all for money, took them into his cave, and showed them the
-treasure-chest. At the sight of it the turtlers stared, as well they
-might, and most readily agreed to take off Ned and his gold at once.
-The three set to work, and presently the boat was loaded almost to
-the water’s edge with riches. The turtlers went about like men in a
-dream, and they were only roused from a sort of stupid bewilderment
-when they had rowed the boat out of the cove and found her so heavy
-that they feared she should be swamped by the heave of the sea.
-
-‘“Lord!” says one of them, “see there; if the boat were to fill and
-go down. Did you ever see more fearful monsters?”
-
-‘And sure enough there were Ned’s old friends swimming on each side
-of the boat, as though they were appointed the guardians of the
-treasure. However, no accident happened, and as they neared the
-turtling ship, the sailors cried out that they were coming on board
-with treasure enough to buy a kingdom.
-
-‘You may think for yourselves, mates, how the entire crew of the
-bark, which carried about half-a-dozen men, received their freight.
-Ned told the simple truth as to how he had got it, and the turtler,
-immediately that the sea-breeze came, stood away for Martinico, the
-two sharks following as usual. Gold, mates, is a thing that makes
-demons out of men. The big chest stood upon the deck, and the crew
-hung round it, and would hardly work the ship. Presently they began
-to handle and weigh the lumps, and dispute about their value. Ned
-saw that a storm was brewing, and fearing that he would be stabbed
-or flung overboard to the sharks astern, so as to be no bar to a
-distribution of the wealth, stood forward and said that they were
-as much entitled to the gold as he, for if he had found it, they
-had given him the means of turning it to use. Well, at this speech
-they professed great satisfaction, and swore that Ned was an honest
-man and a good comrade, and that as he said, so it would be done.
-But it was clear that they all distrusted each other. Ned saw them
-whispering and caballing, and once or twice he observed a man
-concealing a knife in his garment, so that the haft came handy to his
-grasp. All this time the sharks were following steadily in the wake,
-and Ned did not like the look of the weather, for great black clouds
-were gathering in the sky. Still the men were looking sourer and
-sourer at each other, and gradually drawing off into two parties, one
-on each side of the chest, the twain watching each other warily. Ned
-tried to remonstrate with them, and told them that they ought to take
-in sail, for the weather looked threatening. But they ordered him
-to mind his own business, and said, they had not taken him on board
-to be captain over them. So Ned sat on the weather-bulwark, looking
-very uneasily to windward. Mates, you have all seen a squall in these
-seas, and you know how it comes. The weather getting very thick, the
-men forming each group began to whisper, and then, all at once, as if
-they had made up their minds, they gave a loud shout, and made a rush
-at the box; as they did so, they drew knives and snicker-snees, and
-cut and chopped at each other, struggling and cursing over the chest.
-Ned saw the blood splash down on the gold, and he rushed forward to
-separate them, crying out, “Madmen that you are—look out for the
-squall first and fight afterwards.”
-
-‘But it was too late, mates. The sky got black, and with a loud
-roar the squall came, tearing up the sea before it, and in the very
-centre of the flying foam Ned swore he saw Foul-Weather Don, with
-his arms stretched forth, as if in triumph. In an instant the blast
-struck the sails, heaving the turtler bodily on her broadside, and as
-she lurched over, the heavy box of gold fetched away with a mighty
-surge, and went crashing through and through the frail bulwark, and
-then with a great plunge down to the bottom of the ocean, there to
-lie, mates, even until the day when the sea shall give up its dead!
-All this passed in a moment, and the next instant the ship, as
-though relieved by having cast forth the guilty gold, righted with
-a heavy roll, which sent the seamen sprawling across the deck, with
-their knives in their hands, and bloody gashes in their faces and
-limbs. The squall was over, and the sun burst out; Ned rushed to
-the lee-beam, and saw, just where the gold had fallen into the sea,
-the bottom of a boat all covered with barnacles and sea-weed, which
-he knew well. She seemed now saturated and rotten with water, for
-the charm was off her, mates; and while Ned gazed at her, she went
-gradually down into the great depths of the sea, and the sharks sunk
-out of sight with her. As they disappeared, Ned felt a heavy load
-leave his heart, and he thought that he had got cheaply rid of it,
-even at the expense of the gold. The curse was taken off him, and he
-rather surprised the turtlers, who were standing looking very like
-fools, by cutting a set of capers on the deck. The first thing they
-did was to try for soundings, but the line ran out every fathom, and
-the lead touched no bottom. So they lengthened the cord with every
-piece of loose rope in the ship, but the sea appeared unfathomable.
-The gold was sunk in a gulf from which no power of man could raise
-it; and so at length, mutually cursing and blaming each other, they
-wore the ship round, and stood back to pursue their turtling cruise.
-From that time to this, mates, no mariner has ever seen Foul-Weather
-Don. Ned Purvis got safely back to England, and, as I informed you
-already, he told this tale, aboard the Bristol ship, to him who made
-it known to me. Regarding its truth, I leave every man to judge for
-himself.’
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IX.
-
- THE AUTHOR, WITH SUNDRY OF HIS COMRADES, SET OUT FOR THE CREEK
- WHERE HE LEFT HIS BARK, AND THERE BRAVELY CAPTURE A SPANISH
- SCHOONER.
-
-
-Nearly a month passed away since the evening on which I listened to
-the story of Foul-Weather Don, and no ship had yet passed within
-a dozen miles of the mouth of the bay. So all hands began to grow
-very impatient, and divers schemes were proposed, such as shifting
-our quarters to some other point of the coast, where we might have
-better luck. It was then that I, for the first time, called to mind
-the boat which I had left in the creek, where I first landed on the
-island. Now, as I had heard many stories of buccaneers putting to sea
-in boats or canoes, and boarding and capturing Spanish vessels, it
-occurred to me, that if we could get possession of the Frenchman’s
-skiff, we could divide our party between it and the canoe, leaving
-ample room for the stowage of provisions and water for a cruise.
-This scheme I imparted to Stout Jem, by whom it was received with
-approbation. We were nine in number, well armed, and therefore of
-quite sufficient force to capture any Spaniard, not a man of war,
-which we were likely to fall in with. It was therefore resolved that
-Le Picard, one of our Frenchmen, Blue Peter, and Nicky, should start,
-under my guidance, for the cove to the westward, and if we found the
-boat, should navigate her round the coast to the bay, where the rest
-of the party would be prepared with provisions and water, ready to
-stow on board, so that, in company with the canoe, we could put to
-sea at once. No time was lost in putting the scheme into execution.
-Meinheer, who knew something of sail-making, cut out a small square
-sail or lug, which we were to carry with us, and which would suit the
-boat, it being easy for us to cut and fashion a mast and yard after
-we had found her. We also carried a good-sized keg for water, and a
-small quantity of beef and cassava bread, trusting chiefly, however,
-to our guns for our subsistence.
-
-We set out by moonlight, intending to sleep during the heat of the
-day; and after an hour’s trudge through the wet grass and bushes,
-which were quite drenched with the copious dews, passed the spot
-where lay the Buccaneers who had been hanged by the Spaniards.
-Truly our poor comrades slept in a tranquil resting-place—a spot of
-greenest grass, with feathery palms overhead, bending and rustling
-in the night wind. We stopped to rest, when the sun rose, until the
-sea-breeze should set in, watching its coming from beneath a thick
-mango-tree, whence we could look down upon the blue sea beneath.
-After the land-breeze flickered and failed, there was a pause, during
-which the sun shone with blistering power. Then, far off, on the
-glassy surface of the sea, came the dark belt of roughened water,
-streaked with white, which proclaims the daily return of the brisk
-north-westerly trade, and in half an hour more, it was whistling
-through the bushes in half a gale of wind. We dined this day by the
-little runnel where I had killed the duck, and then travelled until
-sunset, when we encamped in our blankets, well worn out by our long
-day’s march. The journey to the cove was fatiguing, but performed
-without any particular adventure. We sometimes saw wild cattle, and
-heard the cry of wild dogs, and I observed, when we got glimpses of
-the sea, numerous great brown pelicans, flapping heavily over the
-water, somewhat like the cranes on our own coasts, and often diving
-down with a splash into the sea after the fish, which they mark
-from a great height. In the afternoon of the second day, I reckoned
-that we could not be far from the cove, but the exact spot was
-difficult to hit, as the general appearance of the coast hereabouts
-was very similar, and the tangled growth of underwood prevented us
-from always keeping so close to the edge of the sea-cliff as we
-otherwise should have done. We had trudged along all the afternoon,
-keeping a sharp look-out, and sometimes forcing our way with our
-great knives through the creepers and brushwood, so as to be able to
-gaze down the iron-bound sea wall to where the great driving swells
-were rising and sinking upon the rock, and foaming furiously over
-every projecting peak and pinnacle of stone; when, having stopped
-to hold a consultation—for I was now becoming very fearful that we
-had overshot our mark—we all suddenly heard the report of a musket
-or fowling-piece, fired not far off. This terribly disconcerted us,
-for we knew that the cove could not be distant, and we feared that
-the secret of its existence was not known to me alone. However, we
-withdrew into the thicket, where we could not well be discovered, and
-lay close. In the course of the next hour, we heard three shots fired
-from different points around us, and discoursed eagerly as to whether
-they were probably Buccaneers, or Spaniards who were hunting in the
-neighbourhood. At all events, we now despaired of recovering the
-boat, inasmuch as the great chance was that the hunters had landed in
-my cove, as I called it, and would, of course, appropriate the skiff,
-if she still lay there, to their own purposes.
-
-While we were talking lowly among ourselves, Blue Peter, the
-Mosquito-man, suddenly started up on his knees, and told us to
-listen. We did so, very intently, and presently heard a rustling and
-a snapping of dry twigs in the wood, but although we looked with all
-our eyes, we could see nothing.
-
-‘Tush!’ says Nicky; ‘you are a fool, Peter! and take a wild pig for a
-Spaniard.’
-
-But the Indian seized his piece, cocked it, and suddenly levelling
-it, fired, before we could prevent him.
-
-‘Hush!’ quoth he, very earnestly—‘hush! and we will be safe.’
-
-‘Safe!’ said Nicky. ‘Why, if they are Spaniards, they will be down
-upon us in a twinkling.’
-
-‘No,’ replied the Mosquito-man—‘no, no! They shooting all round:
-think my gun one of their camarados—eh?’
-
-‘The man is right,’ said Le Picard. ‘But what, in the name of the
-diable, have you fired at?’
-
-‘Me show you!’ said Blue Peter; and he crawled into the underwood
-so circumspectly, that one scarcely heard a rustle, and presently,
-returning, flung the body of a huge dog among us.
-
-‘A Spanish blood-hound!’ exclaimed Nicky; and we all recognized the
-fawn colour, with grim, black muzzle, and the great muscular limbs
-of the animal. But to put all question aside, the creature wore a
-leather collar, with a brass plate, on which was inscribed the name,
-‘Manuel G. Alcansas,’ so it was quite clear, that we were surrounded
-by a hunting party of the enemy, and that, had it not been for the
-keen eye of the Indian, who observed the blood-hound, and shot it
-almost when it was in the act of giving tongue, we should probably
-have been massacred. We were all tolerably startled, and, after a
-hurried consultation, agreed that we might as well lie close where we
-were, as attempt to shift to less dangerous quarters, as by moving
-we might unwittingly run into the very jaws of death. At last we
-decided to climb up certain trees, the branches whereof interlaced,
-Blue Peter having first cut the throat of the dog, and scattered the
-blood copiously around, so that it would embarrass and destroy the
-scent of any other hound which might pass that way. He then flung the
-body up into the branches of a tree. Not long after we heard a voice
-hallooing loudly, as we supposed for the slain dog, and some other
-shots were fired at a distance. However, the sun sank and the stars
-shone down through the leaves, and we still remained unmolested.
-Making ourselves as comfortable as our position would permit, we
-munched our supper, of which, however, we could eat but little, for
-we suffered much from thirst. Fortunately, there was water enough in
-the keg to afford us a few mouthfuls a piece, but we were afraid to
-straggle abroad in search of more. With the grey dawn we were afoot,
-cautiously exploring the locality, and I had much ado to restrain a
-sudden burst of exclamation when I recognised the little hill, to
-the top of which I had climbed to look around, after scrambling up
-the precipitous banks of the cove. I now knew whereabouts we were,
-almost to a yard, and carefully guiding the rest, and taking great
-heed to make no noise, we made our way to the top of the very scaur
-or ravine, up which I had crept from the water. It was not easy,
-however, to make out whether the cove was empty, for the morning
-was yet dim and grey, and the trees grew thick below. We proceeded,
-however, moving in single file along the edge of the rock, which,
-as the reader remembers, was thickly covered with wood, such as
-bushes and parasitical plants, with great trees growing out of the
-rifts and cracks in the cliff, and bending over the water so that
-the branches of those on both sides interlacing, quite canopied
-the still deep sea beneath. As we clambered on by the edge of the
-precipice, a sound suddenly struck my ear with which I was too well
-acquainted to be easily deceived—it was the flap of canvas. Nicky
-heard it as well as myself, and we all paused. The land wind was
-just beginning to die out, and only came in heavy dank puffs down
-from the hills. We waited for the next gust; it shook the dew from
-the branches in a great sparkling shower, and gave a great rustle,
-as it were, down the ravine, in the middle of which, we again heard
-the flap of canvas, and a rattle as of reef points against a sail.
-Being guided by the sound, we proceeded a few paces onwards, and then
-coming to a comparatively clear bit of ground, we crawled upon our
-bellies to the edge of the cliff, and through the trees and boughs
-saw a small vessel with two masts, of the class called schooners,
-beneath. She was moored in the very centre of the cove, very snugly,
-being made fast by four hawsers, two a-head and two astern, to the
-trunks of trees growing near the water on either bank. She had two
-boats in the water, floating by her main chains, and one of them
-I immediately recognised to be the object of our journey. Here,
-then, was the vessel to whom the hunters, whose guns we had heard,
-evidently belonged: and, indeed, without other evidence, Nicky and Le
-Picard knew enough about the fashion of those seas to be sure that
-the schooner was Spanish built, she being, possibly, a fishing vessel
-from Cuba, although what she did on the coast here, we could not well
-imagine. The question now, however, was how we were to act? Thinking
-themselves, no doubt, in security, there was not a single man awake
-upon deck; but several stout fellows were lying asleep under canvas
-and tarpaulins upon the forecastle. Presently, after we had gazed
-our fill upon the schooner, Nicky asked our opinion as to whether
-it would be possible to clamber down to the water’s edge, and make
-off with both boats before the crew awoke. But Le Picard thought the
-risk too great. Besides, he argued, when they miss the boats, they
-can chase us out to sea in the schooner, where we would infallibly be
-taken. While they were talking, I was turning over another plan in my
-own mind.
-
-‘Instead of taking the boats,’ quoth I, ‘why should we not take the
-ship?’
-
-At this they all started, and reminded me that we were but four men,
-whereas the Spaniards might well be a dozen; and they had dogs, too,
-fierce bloodhounds, of which Le Picard, in particular, professed a
-great horror.
-
-‘Look you,’ quoth I, ‘this is my plan. Yesterday the Spaniards were
-hunting ashore, and to-day it is very like that they will renew
-their pastime, leaving, perhaps, only one man, or perhaps not even
-that to take charge of the schooner; for you see that she is moored
-very safely, and with her bows pointing down the creek so as to be
-ready for a start. Now, look at her rigging; see, her jib can be
-hoisted in a moment, and her fore and mainsails can be set merely by
-letting go the brails, and running aft the sheets; for you observe
-that the gaffs are already hoisted, therefore the schooner is ready
-for sea. Now I know, in a general manner, the direction of the cove
-below. It runs for a little way parallel to the coast, and then turns
-to the right, and so opens up into the sea. What is there to prevent
-us boarding the schooner when she is left almost, if not quite,
-undefended, and so carrying her away?’
-
-They all applauded this design, and the more we talked of it the
-better it seemed to be. The schooner was a trim-looking vessel, such
-as the Spaniards can build very well, and we judged from her shape
-that she was exceeding fast as well as easy to manage. Besides,
-the greater length of the cove running westward, what puffs of
-sea-breeze traversed it would be in our favour, and although there
-would necessarily be some risk when we had passed the elbow, and came
-to get the ship out in face of the swell, yet we determined at all
-events to make the experiment. Nothing venture nothing have, so we
-shook hands gaily, and thanked our stars for such a slice of good
-luck.
-
-As in many other adventures, the first and most difficult duty which
-we had to perform was to wait, so we ensconced ourselves in thick
-bushes, where we could see without being easily discerned, and
-watched the Spaniards as keenly as hawks do larks. The sun was above
-the horizon about half-an-hour, when a man issued from the cabin,
-and tapped the deck loudly with a handspike. At this summons the
-sluggards on the forecastle began to stir themselves, and to crawl
-forth, one by one, yawning from under the sails, and presently three
-or four bloodhounds, who seemed to have been sleeping among them,
-came whining and stretching themselves from their warm nests. The man
-who had wakened the rest, then went round the schooner, and appeared
-to examine the state of the moorings. The aspect of things seemed
-to satisfy him, for he went below, and presently the crew had their
-breakfast, which they ate on deck—a couple of bowls of cocoa, or some
-such beverage, being carried aft to the cabin. Soon after this, we
-observed, with great delight, a number of muskets and pistols brought
-on deck, at the sight of which, the grim bloodhounds yelped and
-bayed. The captain, as we called him then, appeared again; and after
-a long discourse, carried on with a great deal of gesticulation, the
-whole crew gathering round and handling the arms, the bloodhounds
-were fed, and the skiff—my skiff—hauled alongside, no doubt to convey
-the hunters on shore. The captain then seemed to be giving orders to
-one of the crew, a stout fellow, who wore a great striped woollen
-cap and had a long unsheathed knife in his girdle, and then the
-whole party, excepting the fellow with the knife and cap, tumbled
-into the boat, the bloodhounds leaping in along with them, and rowed
-towards the extreme head of the creek. The Spaniards numbered about a
-dozen, without including a boy whom they had with them, and of course
-weighed down the skiff until her gunwale was almost at the water’s
-edge. We were for a little time in some perturbation, lest they
-should chance to come our way. We heard them shouting, and laughing,
-and crashing through the boughs, as they made their way up the steep
-banks of the creek, and then the boat came floating down again to
-the schooner, with the boy paddling her. Meantime, the man with the
-striped cap had disappeared in a little cook-house or caboose, from
-the funnel of which a smoke began to rise; and the boy, having made
-fast the boat, went aft to the cabin, and presently returned with
-the bowls, which we had seen carried thither, empty. Now, as we had
-seen but one man come out of this cabin, and as breakfast had been
-served there for two, we considered that there were three persons
-left in charge of the ship, but that one of these was probably sick
-or disabled. While we were making these observations, the reader
-may be sure that we also listened attentively, in order to find out
-in what direction the hunting party had proceeded; and presently,
-hearing shouts and the reports of guns very faintly, and gradually
-becoming more so, until they were no longer audible, we congratulated
-ourselves that the hunters were out of the way, and that so far, our
-task would be easy.
-
-The next point was, how to get on board the schooner so suddenly
-and so quietly as to leave those in charge of her no opportunity of
-giving an alarm. First we thought of swimming, but Le Picard was not
-skilful at this exercise; and, besides, we saw the backs and snouts
-of several caymans, moving about in the water. Then Nicky proposed to
-swing ourselves aboard, by means of the warps, fixed to the trees;
-but on close examination, we found the banks so precipitous, that
-it would be very difficult to make our way to the ropes, without
-giving an alarm. We were thus in considerable perplexity, fearing our
-scheme would miscarry in the very outset, when I observed a means
-whereby we might, although at some risk, accomplish our end. I have
-said that the cove or creek was so narrow that the branches of the
-great trees, growing in the refts of the rock on either side, met
-and interlaced, and from these branches hung perpendicularly, like
-great ropes, many long tendrils or withes, very tough and strong.
-Now, as it chanced, one of these depending from a stout branch,
-swung close by the fore-top-mast head of the schooner, dangling
-indeed to the cross-trees. I pointed this out to my comrades, and
-they all agreed that it would be very possible to clamber out upon
-the bough, and slide down the withe into the rigging; but that the
-deck must be clear when we made the attempt, otherwise we could not
-fail of being discovered. It was fortunate, therefore, that the man
-with the striped cap continued in the cook-house, where we heard him
-clattering amongst pots and pans, and concluded that he was preparing
-a meal for the men ashore. But, as Nicky said, when one cooks a
-dinner, one never knows who may eat it. The boy remained about the
-deck for some time, but at length went into the cabin, and, staying
-there, we concluded to make the venture. Fastening our guns across
-our shoulders, we again shook hands, and vowed to stand by each other
-to the death. Then we crept cautiously along, until we came to the
-tree, from which sprang the great branch, which we looked to be the
-first stage of our journey to the schooner’s deck. This tree grew
-about a fathom beneath the edge of the rock, but it was easy to swing
-ourselves down to it, by the matted vegetation, which clung to the
-face of the stone. Then, one after another, we crawled out upon the
-bough, which shook a little, but bore us bravely. The schooner was
-now right below, and not a living thing stirring on her decks. I was
-the first man, and Nicky was at my heels. The Indian came next, and
-the Frenchman brought up the rear. All of us whites being sailors,
-the feat was not difficult; and as for the Mosquito man, he could
-climb like a cat. Having satisfied myself that the withe was well
-attached to the bough, I first twined my legs round the former,
-and then grasping it, slid easily down, until my feet touched the
-cross-trees of the Spanish schooner, and in a moment my comrades were
-clustering around me, no alarm being as yet excited. After pausing
-a moment, to get firm grips of the stays, I gave the word, and the
-whole four slid like lightning down the ropes, hand over hand, as
-sailors say, and came with a great bounce upon deck together. Le
-Picard instantly leaped to the cook-house, and the Spaniard coming
-out at the same moment, the Frenchman dealt him a blow with the
-butt-end of a heavy pistol, which flung him backwards, quite stunned
-upon the deck, while Nicky and I ran to the cabin, meeting at the
-threshold, the boy, and a comely woman, very dark, and with the
-blackest eyes I ever saw, who directly set up a great shriek of
-dismay.
-
-But Nicky and I, pointing to the cabin and drawing forth pistols,
-made them understand that they must go below and be silent, as they
-valued their lives. The boy slunk back directly, and the woman turned
-to a livid paleness, and, swooning away, would have fallen down the
-ladder, but we supported her and laid her on the cabin floor; then,
-directly running on deck, we shut down the hatch. All this hardly
-occupied a moment; and, seeing Le Picard and Blue Peter cutting the
-warps forward, we drew our knives, and, working with good will, soon
-severed the tough piles of hemp, aft, and the schooner was unmoored.
-We waited a moment with great impatience, to see if she would drift,
-but, remaining stationary, we ran up the jib, and slackened the
-brails of the mainsail, so as, without actually setting the sail, to
-expose a good breadth of canvas, but it hung idly; the sea breeze
-had not yet set in, or if it had it did not reach us in the depths
-of the creek. We therefore flung a long line into the lightest of
-the two boats alongside, and Blue Peter and Nicky leaping into it,
-pulled with all their strength for the elbow at which the creek
-tended seawards, and made the line fast to a tree there, while Le
-Picard and I hauled upon the warp, and soon saw that the schooner
-was obeying the impulse thus given to her, and slowly moving through
-the water. In a twinkling, our comrades leaped on board again, and
-added their strength to ours, all of us working with clenched teeth
-and breathless eagerness. Just then, turning to look at the wounded
-Spaniard, who was sprawling upon the deck, I felt a breath of cool
-air on my face, the jib-sheet rattled, the light canvas swelled out,
-and in a moment the mainsail moved out of its sleepy folds, and
-the warp upon which we were hauling slackened. The schooner felt
-the puff, and I ran aft and took the helm, steering her in close
-by the starboard shore, which, when we turned seawards, would be
-the weather side of the cove. The mingled trees and rocks seemed
-to glide away from us. I looked over the side, and saw the bubbles
-rippling in the transparent water; and as I lifted my head again, I
-started with delight to feel the first heaving of the schooner, as
-she began to meet the lazy swell. The elbow, or turn of the creek,
-was not more than the length of the schooner ahead of us, and my
-three comrades all ran to the bows to watch the depth of water, and
-shouted that we might graze the rocks. Therefore I ported my helm,
-so as to send the vessel close in, and just as we slowly opened the
-corner I put the tiller hard down, and being fortunately a very handy
-craft for steering, she gradually swung round, and we all uttered
-a shout together as we saw, at the end of a short rocky passage,
-the open sea, streaked with the white bars of breaking waves. But
-we were not out yet: almost immediately on rounding the point of
-the creek a gust of the sea breeze struck us on the starboard bows,
-making the jib rattle and flap like thunder, and directly the head
-of the schooner fell off towards the rocks on the leeward side. The
-Frenchman exclaimed that we must take to the boats after all, but
-Nicky answered him, “Yes—but only to carry a warp to the rocks at the
-mouth of the creek!” No sooner said than done. Another line was flung
-into the skiff, and Nicky and the Indian went with three strokes
-to the weather extremity of the creek. Here the surf was beating
-violently, coming with great lashing surges round the corner of the
-cliff, and causing the water to rise and fall more than a fathom
-with every undulation of the sea. Here was a jagged pinnacle of rock
-beaten by the waves, which every now and then burst right above it;
-over this the Indian with great dexterity cast a loose hitch of the
-line, while we on board, running to the schooner’s bows, hauled upon
-it as before. It was lucky for us that the sea-breeze only blew
-up the ravine in uncertain puffs, and that the place was full of
-counter-currents, and eddies of air, which first filled our sails
-one way and then another, as we heaved and rolled upon the broken
-swells which dashed from side to side of the channel. We worked at
-the warp like desperate men, as, indeed, we were. Every now and then
-a sudden toss of the water would fling us back; but then the counter
-reflection of the seas from the opposite wall of rock would jerk us
-forward, and we soon found that we were gradually making our way
-towards the mouth of the cove, keeping so close to the weather side,
-that every now and then the masts, when flung over to starboard,
-rattled among the bushes overhead, and sent down showers of leaves,
-which would fly in uncertain whirls and dives amongst the rigging.
-At last, the decisive moment came. In a minute we would be hove upon
-the leeward entrance of the cove, or be out clear at sea. I ran again
-to take the helm. Le Picard and the Indian, running to the weather
-fore-chains, gave a last surge upon the line by way of a launch. The
-schooner’s head plunged into the trough of the sea, not a fathom from
-the rocks, and as she rose—her bows drew beyond the shelter of the
-cove—the full blast of the sea-breeze caught her jib—and her head
-swung gain to leeward.
-
-‘Help her with the foresail, comrades!’ I shouted. They had
-anticipated me—the Indian letting go the brails, and then helping
-the whites to draw aft the sheet. The sail surged and flapped so as
-to shake the schooner to her very keel, and the great sheet-block
-jerked madly to and fro with bounds which would have dashed through a
-strong wall. But still, though they could not yet master the canvas,
-the schooner was not insensible to its lifting power, and I felt her,
-as she rose with her broadside to a great clear sea, gather way, and
-start as it were from under me. There was just a moment of terrible
-suspense. The masts bent to leeward until their trucks were within a
-couple of fathoms of the lee promontory. You could almost leap on the
-great rough masses of wet stone, which lay close abeam, and then in a
-moment the schooner rose to another sea, all three sails now bellying
-to the wind, and once more hove clear of the land, although I saw
-through the clear water a glimpse of reef under our counter, which
-the keel must have scraped, and although the head of the mainmast
-actually tore away the projecting branch of a great prickly bush
-which was waving and dancing in the wind.
-
-We were drawing our first deep breath after our peril when I heard
-a great shout above me, and starting round, I saw between me and
-the sky the figure of a man standing with a gun upon the very verge
-of the precipice which formed the line of coast. He directly fired
-his piece, and set up a loud outcry to his comrades, three or four
-of whom directly joined him, and fired a volley at us which did no
-damage. So we jumped up on the taffrail rail, and waving our hats,
-gave them a loud cheer, and told them that if they wanted their
-schooner, they might swim after us, and then we would consider the
-matter. They made violent gestures, but the sea-breeze blowing so
-freshly, carried back their voices, and we knew not what they said.
-Carrying on as we best could with our ill-set sails, until we had
-made a good half mile offing, we luffed the schooner up into the
-wind, and with some trouble, got the canvas properly extended; then
-pulling the helm hard down, we got the jib-sheet to windward, and so
-lay to, dancing and surging merrily upon the sea.
-
-And now we shook hands again, and embraced each other cordially. Here
-we stood on the deck of a fine schooner—our own by lawful capture
-from our enemies—and we thought of the surprise we would give our
-comrades in the bay. But the first thing to be settled was the fate
-of our prisoners, and we determined very unanimously that they must
-be put on board one of the boats, and left to find their way to the
-shore, Nicky only stipulating that if the lady should take a fancy
-to him, she should be allowed to remain on board. With some laughing
-at this proposition, we opened the cabin door, and called to our
-captives to come on deck, which they did, pale and trembling, for
-they seemed to expect no less than instant death. Nicky would be
-gallant to the lady, and to that end made her profound salutes, and
-spoke some gibberish, which he said was very good Spanish, for an
-expression of his admiration of her charms; but she never ceased
-crying out for ‘her husband—her husband,’ and begging, in the name
-of all the saints, to be put ashore. The boy, being more collected,
-managed to inform us—I, with my scanty knowledge of Spanish forming
-but a poor interpreter—that the schooner was called Nostra Senora
-del Carmine—that she had come to catch tortoise and to hunt wild
-cattle along the coast, it being the opinion of the citizens of
-Havannah, to which she belonged, that the late expedition had
-routed out all the privateersmen and hunters on the northern shore
-of Hispaniola. We then directed our attention to the man who had
-been acting as cook, and who, having partially recovered from his
-blow, was sitting up and looking very scared and foolish. However,
-his wits—if he had any—were still abroad, and we could not make him
-understand any of our questions; only when he was shown the boat with
-a couple of oars, and we pointed to the shore, and made as though
-we would push him over the side, he comprehended fast enough, and
-presently he and the boy got into the skiff belonging to the ship,
-and the lady, who had somewhat recovered her spirits, followed them,
-taking some clothing with her, and hiding her face as much as she
-could in a black veil. Although the sea was rough, they had a good
-boat and a favourable breeze, and we did not stand on our way until
-we saw them fairly into the shelter of the cove. Then we shifted the
-helm, let go the weather jib-sheet, and so began to plough our way to
-the eastward against wind and sea.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER X.
-
-THEY RETURN WITH THE PRIZE TO THE MARMOUSETTES, AND NICKY HAMSTRING
-SHORTLY RELATES HIS HISTORY.
-
-
-The wind blowing steady, the ship was easy to manage, so we speedily
-set to rummage our prize. Going into the hold, we found that she had
-little aboard save some campeachy-wood and some cocoa-nuts, and a
-couple of old brass guns, of about six pounds calibre, which seemed
-to have been put there for ballast. In the cabin was a good store of
-powder and lead for casting bullets, which was exceedingly valuable
-to us, and several long-barrelled muskets in good condition. The
-best part of the prize, however, was her storeroom, as it contained
-a great quantity of rope, canvas, and other things appertaining to
-the use of a ship. We also found a tool chest and a medicine chest,
-both of which were very welcome to us. In navigating the schooner,
-we, of course, divided ourselves into two watches—the larboard and
-the starboard watch, Nicky and I having the one, and Le Picard and
-the Indian the other. We also reefed our sails so as to have the ship
-snugger, and the better prepared for squalls should any happen. We
-made good progress that night when the land-breeze blew, and hoped
-next day, by evening, to observe the headlands of the Marmousettes.
-Catching sight, however, soon after sunrise, of a sail close in
-shore, and not wishing, in our weak condition, to be overhauled, we
-stood away directly to sea, so that, by noon, only the blue mountain
-ridges of Hispaniola were visible. In the afternoon we put about
-ship, and made again for the land. This long stretch caused us to
-lose much time, so that we had another night’s navigation before us
-ere we could work up to our bay. Nicky and I had the mid-watch. It
-was a glorious night. We were running five or six knots, with the
-cool land-breeze sighing in our sails. The heaven was one vault of
-stars, and, lying on deck wrapped up in folds of old canvas, while
-Nicky held the tiller beside me, I fixed my gaze upon the Southern
-Cross, that beautiful cluster of stars which shines only in the
-tropics, and which, appearing in the solemn and thoughtful night,
-always caused me to feel that I was in a strange part of the world,
-even more than the curious animals, and plants, and men, which one
-sees daily and ordinarily about one, when abroad. And yet, beautiful
-as the constellation was, methought it had less charms than the
-Plough, and the bright belt of Orion circling about the polar star,
-which I used to gaze upon in the long night-watches at home. As I
-thought of these, I thought of the old fisher-boat tossing upon the
-wild bay of St. Andrew’s, or lying stilly at her grapnel in the mouth
-of the Balwearie burn, while my mother and I sat with our palms
-mending nets upon the sand-hill in the sun. I think I would have
-been a great day-dreamer had I not led such a stirring life as kept
-my muscles busier than my brain; but on these quiet clear nights,
-aboard ship, when all was still, save the steady murmur of the
-wind, and the monotonous plunge of the vessel, as she breasted the
-ever-rolling seas—in these nights there is a witchery upon me, and I
-love to let my fancy carry me away, and surround me with old faces
-and old times. So now, being in this mood, I dreamed and dreamed
-with my eyes open, persuading myself that I was on board the Jean
-Livingstone again, and that we were jogging along the rocky coast
-of Forfar, until I actually started up, and looking at the shore to
-windward, thought that I could discover in the shimmer of the moon
-the tall white rock we called the Lady of Arbroath.
-
-‘Nicky,’ says I, being in this mood, ‘do you ever think of home?’
-
-‘That do I,’ he responded, ‘and hug myself that I am not there.’
-
-‘But is there no old place,’ quoth I—‘no old face you would wish to
-look on again?’
-
-‘Not a bit of it,’ he replied, ‘I am too happy here. We have a good
-ship, we have staunch comrades, we have prospect of wresting plenty
-of doubloons and pieces of eight from those rascally Spaniards. We
-have Jamaica, with all its taverns, and its dice, and its wenches, to
-help us to spend them; and besides all these, why, we have at this
-moment a steady land-breeze, which is sending us along at five knots,
-and a glass of good brandy, after a good supper, to keep out the
-marsh fever. What more can any man want?’
-
-‘Perhaps,’ quoth I, ‘you were not happy at home?’
-
-‘You have hit it there,’ replied my comrade. ‘No. My father was
-a stout king’s man—why he was so, I know not, for I am sure the
-king never did much for him. But poor dad got what brains he had
-knocked out at Naseby, and some time after my mother married old
-Ephraim Crotch, as bitter a Puritan as ever wore cropped hair and
-ass’s ears. Now I, being a youth of spirit, did in no ways take
-to my father-in-law—on the contrary. Well, I mocked his slang, and
-mimicked his snuffle. Many a time did he lay his staff across these
-shoulders—augh! they ache even now! The old frump—I hate the thought
-of him!—often hath he turned me out of doors, to sleep in the fields.
-Then have I peeped in at the lattice, and seen old square-toes snug
-in the chimney ingle. “Ha!” thought I, “my father’s bones would
-rattle in their grave could he but look in, and see you in his old
-oaken chair, whelp of the Barebones breed!” So you may believe that
-our house was a pretty place for bickering. I loved all that my
-stepfather hated. He said that music was devil’s screeching—ergo,
-I played the viol and the tabor till they were broken on my head.
-He denounced all diversion, swore that rope-dancing was a subtle
-device of the evil one, and that the bowling-alley was the highway to
-hell—ergo, did I frequent fairs and jovial meetings, where the bowls
-trundled, and wrestled many a fall, and grinned through many a horse
-collar. I promise thee, Will, I was not made for a Puritan, and so,
-at length, they having, by an ordinance of old Noll, hewed down our
-Maypole, I e’en laid a good thick splinter thereof across the back of
-my reverend stepfather, and marched from Cornwall for ever and a day.’
-
-‘To London, no doubt?’ quoth I.
-
-‘Even so,’ he said, ‘but there I found neither gold nor silver in
-the streets, and I lived for some months a very unedifying vagabond
-sort of life, knees and elbows being generally very bare, and
-stomach generally very hungry. At length, being hard driven, I e’en
-enlisted, though it went hard against my conscience, under Old Noll.
-Such drilling, such fighting, and such psalm-singing. The sergeant’s
-ratan was never off our shoulders, except when he was exhorting us
-in the pulpit, or standing on a horseblock, calling the royalists
-sons of Agag. So, this going on for some time, and I trying in vain
-to become a saint, for which I had not sufficient bad qualities, I
-e’en took leave to desert; and because the land was too hot to hold
-me, I became a mariner and went to sea. But at sea, Will, I saw one
-great sight, I saw the king land on the beach of Dover, and having
-long observed that seasons of rejoicing are seasons of hospitality,
-I treated my ship as I had done my regiment, and followed the
-royal train up to London. That was indeed a march. All the country
-flocked to the road to see the king come back to his own again. It
-was nothing but eating and drinking, and up caps, “Huzza for King
-Charles, and to the devil with the Rump!” Well, on Blackheath, near
-London, was drawn up my own old regiment. ‘Gad, the sun was on my
-side of the hedge now, for there stood our sergeant as grim as
-Beelzebub in the sulks, and I having many pottles of wine in me, gave
-a tug to his grizzled moustache, and asked what he thought of me for
-a son of Agag now. I warrant you Old Ironside used his halberd with
-very little discretion by way of reply, and so I came away with a
-bloody cockscomb. But all was one for that. Wine was a great balm,
-and I applied it plenteously; being indeed in a very loyal state of
-drunkenness for certain days, I know not how many, until, having a
-little recovered, I found myself in the filthy hold of a ship with
-other ragamuffins; some sober and weeping, some drunk and singing,
-and some ill with the small-pox and jail fever, raving and dying.
-Then I presently understood that all this goodly company was bound on
-a voyage to the plantations in Barbadoes—we having, it seems, signed
-articles to that effect, in consideration of certain small sums of
-money, which they told us we had received, and spent in drink very
-jovially, and as became stout-hearted fellows. I made a bold attempt
-to escape by knocking down the sentry at the hatchway, but all I
-gained by the proceeding was a pair of very heavy irons, which were
-put on near the Tower, and which were not knocked off until we were
-three days’ sail from Barbadoes. There I landed, and, being duly
-sold, was set to labour with sundry other companions in misfortune
-amongst the sugar-canes. In a few months I was one of a very few
-survivors, but being very weak and sickly from two fevers which I
-had, I was not very sharply looked after, and so I managed, without
-much difficulty, to smuggle myself on board a small bark bound for
-Jamaica, where I joined the “Brethren of the Coast,” and have lived a
-reasonably jolly life ever since.’
-
-This was Nicky’s story, and an adventurous one it was. While I was
-thinking of it, he began again—
-
-‘No, no—no England for me, while there are Spaniards to fight, good
-ships to sail in, and stout fellows to drink with in these bright
-Indian seas.’ And therewith, having taken a good draught of brandy,
-he burst out singing:
-
- ‘Take comfort, pretty Margery, and swab away your tears,
- Your sweetheart, Tom, has sailed among the gallant Buccaneers,
- So dry your eyes, my Margery, your Tom is true and bold,
- And he’ll come again to see you, lass, with glory and with gold,
- For his comrades are the stoutest and the bravest in the land,
- And there’s ne’er a Don came out of Spain will meet them hand to
- hand.
-
- So-ho! for pike and sabre cut, and balls about your ears,
- ’Tis little he must care for these, would join the Buccaneers!
-
- ‘The man who lies at home at ease, a craven heart has he,
- While there’s wild boars on the hills to hunt, and Spaniards on the
- sea;
- So look alive my stately Don, for spite your thundering guns,
- Your shining gold we’ll make our own, and eke your pretty nuns.
- We’ll spend the first, and love the last, and when we tire ashore,
- ’Tis but another cruise my boys, and back we come with more.
-
- So-ho! for pike and sabre cut, and balls about your ears,
- ’Tis little he must care for these, would join the Buccaneers!’
-
-‘Silence, silence, Nicky!’ said I, laughing; ‘you will awaken the
-watch below.’
-
-‘So be it,’ quoth he; ‘to listen to such a song is better than sleep.
-’Tis a rare good one, and a rare fellow made it in Tortugas, one
-night when we were melting the last pieces of eight remaining after a
-cruise on shore. But you put me out. Hear the last verse—
-
- ‘What though to peace in Europe, the Dons and we incline,
- The treaty seldom has much force—to the south’ard of the line.
- Here’s wassailing and fighting, the merriest of lives,
- With staunch and jovial comrades, with sweethearts and with wives.
- We sweep the green savannahs, we storm the Spanish walls,
- And we’re kings upon the water, by the grace of cannon balls.
-
- Then ho! for pike and sabre cut, and bullets round your ears,
- ’Tis little he must care for these, would head the Buccaneers!’
-
-Next morning, after being becalmed as usual in the interval between
-the land breeze and the regular trade wind, we kept pretty close
-in with the coast, looking anxiously for our bay, and we even
-feared that we had overshot our mark; but about noon the well-known
-rocks became visible, and presently thereafter we dashed up the
-Marmousettes, wondering what our comrades would take us for. There
-was no English flag aboard; but thinking that the folks ashore would
-recognise the cut of the boat sail which we carried along with
-us, we hoisted that to the mainmast head, and with this strange
-standard flying approached the beach. We could see no change in the
-bay, and hoped to find our friends all well. Presently, as we were
-rounding a wooded point, and just opening the huts, a musket was
-fired ashore among the trees, and we heard the loud, hoarse voice of
-Meinheer shouting that a strange ship was in the bay. At this moment,
-doubling the little cape I speak of, and furling up our sails as
-well as we could, we descried the whole of our party running about
-in great commotion upon the beach, shouting to each other, loading
-their pieces, and hammering their flints. Thereon, we all gave a
-great cheer together, and showed ourselves conspicuously above the
-bulwarks; on which, we being immediately recognised, they answered
-our cheer with loud exclamations, and, running to the canoe, came
-alongside just as our anchor fell three fathoms deep upon the white
-sand.
-
-‘What ship is this?’ exclaimed Stout Jem, who was the first to leap
-upon deck.
-
-‘She was the schooner Nostra Senora del Carmine,’ I replied; ‘but now
-she is a bold privateer, and will, I hope, never hear a Spanish name
-again.’
-
-Then we related all the particulars of the schooner’s capture, and
-informed our comrades what a clever sea-boat she was, and how we
-thought that, were she well manned, we could not have a more proper
-ship for our purpose. And then we moored the schooner carefully, and
-Stout Jem inspected her both below and aloft very minutely, being
-exceedingly well pleased at the quantity of stores which were on
-board, and also at the smart appearance and weatherly look of our
-prize. So all the company being in high spirits, we set to work at
-once to victual the schooner, having ample supplies of provisions at
-hand, and into her we of course transferred what clothes and property
-of the kind we had saved from the attack upon the first settlement;
-and having finished our task by nightfall, the whole party embarked,
-and we towed the schooner to the middle of the bay, where we
-anchored, and Stout Jem then proclaimed that he meant to hold a grand
-sailing council upon deck. This is a ceremony always in use amongst
-the buccaneers, and at these consultations they settle the articles
-of the voyage, and assign to every man what his share shall be of the
-total amount of booty which may be captured.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XI.
-
- THE BUCCANEERS PRESENTLY SET SAIL IN THE SCHOONER FOR JAMAICA, WITH
- A RELATION OF THE EVENTS WHICH HAPPENED THERE.
-
-
-Behold us, then, seated in great conclave under an awning, which it
-was Stout Jem’s first precaution to have spread, as, the berths in
-the schooner being close and stifling, we desired to sleep in the
-open air. In such a case, the stretching of an awning preserves a
-crew from the fall of the unwholesome dews, and from the rays of the
-moon, which, mild and beautiful as they are, yet, by some hidden
-power, swell and distort the features of such as sleep with their
-faces unprotected from the baneful light. A sea-box put upon deck
-served as a table, and we sat on chests and coils of rope round it.
-The night was beautiful and serene. The land-breeze just murmured
-aloft, the sleeping water of the bay was dotted with the twinkling
-images of the stars, and all around the dusky hills flung their
-forest ridges high into the balmy air—wreaths of mist and vapour,
-like broad white ribbons, showing where the rich alluvial valleys and
-ravines clove the sweep of the wooded uplands.
-
-Two or three lanterns stood upon the chest, glimmering on the pans
-and pipkins wherein we held our punch, and the fiery red sparks
-beneath every man’s face gave note that we all loved to fortify
-our frames against night air by wholesome pipes and tobacco. So,
-presently, Stout Jem addressed us pretty nearly in this fashion:
-
-‘Well, mates, we sit on the deck of our own craft, lawfully won from
-those misbegotten Spaniards, by four brave men of our own party. Now,
-as the capture was made before we are afloat, the vessel, by the laws
-of the coast, belongs to our comrades who took her, and of course
-they must be paid duly, when the prize-money comes to be overhauled.
-Meantime, the question is, shall we straightway go to sea?’
-
-On this we all shouted—‘Yes, yes; a cruize, a cruize!’
-
-‘Good,’ continued Stout Jem, ‘I say, with you, a cruize. That being
-settled, there are other matters to consider. Here are no guns,
-either calivers, arquebusses, culverins, or falconets. To make booty
-of the rich Spanish galleons without cannon, is like trying to eat
-a lump of bull-beef without teeth. The two brass guns below may do
-in their way. For these we have, however, no carriages; and besides,
-we want a piece of far heavier metal. Another matter is, that on
-board here we have neither a surgeon nor a carpenter, although both
-we and our ship are likely to meet with plenty of hard knocks; and
-furthermore, to make a cruize successful—and as the old falconers
-were wont to say—to fly at game of the first head, we must have more
-men. Jack Spaniard does not always leave his ships defenceless,
-and his galleons have rows of teeth which bite sharply. My counsel
-therefore is, that we stand for Port Royal in Jamaica. On the way we
-may chance upon a something worth picking up, and once arrived there,
-we can fit out in good style, and take on board what men we please.
-Besides, there we can have a French commission, or Letter of Marque,
-the French being now at war with the Spanish. I know that the Dons
-have hung many of our brave comrades with their commissions about
-their necks, but still I approve of doing all things regularly and in
-order. Now, then, you have heard my advice—what do you say to it?’
-
-We replied, with great acclamations, that he had spoken very justly;
-that we had all confidence in his counsels, and that we created him
-captain of the expedition. After some further discussion, I was named
-quartermaster, I being a more experienced sailor than many older men;
-and to Stout Jem, or, as we now called him, Captain Jem, was given
-the charge of the larboard, and to me the charge of the starboard
-watch. This done, we re-christened the schooner—dashing a bottle of
-spirits upon her bows—and calling her the ‘Will-o’-the-Wisp.’ We lay
-quietly at anchor that night, and weighing before dawn, the last of
-the land-wind carried us clear of the bay, and when the sea-breeze
-struck us next morning, we up helm, veered away the sheets, and stood
-away along the coast bound for Jamaica.
-
-How vast is the difference between beating to windward in a small
-vessel against a rough sea, and flying gaily on before wind
-and waves! Cape and headland, and bay and creek, appeared and
-disappeared, as the nimble Will-o’-the-Wisp went bounding on, kicked
-as it were by every foaming sea which rolled behind her. You may
-be sure that we kept a good look-out for the former owners of the
-schooner, as we ran just past the entrance to the cove, but no human
-form could we descry among the rocks and woods. Not very far to
-leeward, we however observed a boat, with a small clumsy sail, making
-her way along the coast; and, approaching a little nearer, I soon
-guessed that she was the boat of the Spaniards, which we had given
-up to them, and that they were probably risking the chances of a run
-to Cuba. To satisfy our curiosity, however, we kept slightly away
-and a cry soon overhauled the little craft. She had but four men in
-her, including he who seemed to have been the captain, and the woman.
-Their sail was a clumsy thing, made of hides and scraps of canvas,
-and useless for any other purpose than to drive before the wind. As
-we approached them, the captain got up and hailed us very vehemently
-in Spanish. The purport of his discourse, as I gathered it, being
-whether, after robbing him of his ship, we meant to run down and sink
-the boat. A movement of the tiller soon made him easy on that point,
-and he sat down doggedly, with his teeth clenched, scowling at us.
-The woman clung to him convulsively, and the three men lay stretched
-in the bottom of the boat, only showing their tangled hair and black
-eyes above the gunwale. Captain Jem, who as he was a brave man, was a
-kind one, told me to ask whether they needed any food or water, which
-I did; but the Spaniard only waved his hand impatiently, muttered
-somewhat about ‘_Perros Inglesos_’ English dogs; and one or two of
-the men clenched their fists at us over the side of the boat. All
-this, however, we could well afford to take in good humour.
-
-‘Well,’ quoth Captain Jem, ‘if they are well victualled, so are we;
-and if they won’t say aught to us, we have little that I know of
-to say to them. So, cast loose your brails, my sons, and let’s be
-jogging.’
-
-The sails, which had been partially furled, were accordingly reset,
-and in half an hour the boat was a speck on the horizon to windward.
-We ran through the strait which separates Hispaniola from Tortugas,
-near enough to the latter coast to see that there were long stretches
-of flat rich land washed by the sea, and high mountains beyond.
-We also saw a great many sails of small boats and barks coasting
-along, and innumerable canoes fishing. That same night we passed the
-north-eastern part of Hispaniola, and, directing our course towards
-the south-east, sailed straight for Jamaica. In the afternoon of
-the next day we sighted at a great distance the longest outlying
-point of Hispaniola, and in twenty-four hours thereafter, descried
-Cape Morant, in Jamaica; and coasting along the southern shore,
-which lies hereabouts, very rich and flat, with great peaks, called
-the Blue Mountains, in the distance, we descried at nightfall the
-glimmer of distant lights, which we knew to be those of Port Royal.
-Here is the principal harbour in the island—a very commodious and
-safe one—formed by a deep indentation in the land, like a gulf, and
-sheltered by a long spit or bank of sand, called the Palisades, on
-which the surf beats vehemently, while within the water is like a
-mill-pond. There is but one entrance, and that well fortified; and
-the town of Port Royal is built just beyond the inlet or passage from
-the sea. Although it was near midnight when we anchored outside,
-resolving not to enter until we had daylight to help our pilot, a
-canoe presently came alongside of us, manned by a couple of negroes,
-who were fishermen and pilots, and who offered us abundance of fish
-and fruit very cheap. These men managed their canoe like thorough
-seamen, and one of them we retained to take us in as soon as the
-sea-breeze should blow next morning.
-
-This fellow wore coarse canvas trousers, a striped shirt, and a great
-straw hat, and grinned and showed his white teeth, and rolled his
-eyes, and clattered in his gibberish fashion to all on board.
-
-‘Oh, me de best pilot in all Port Royal,’ he would say; ‘take in a
-king’s ship, big enough to put dis schooner in him pocket, and never
-rub him keel. No, no, massa, Dick Canoe,’ for so he called himself,
-‘de best pilot in all de island, and bery much esteem and respect by
-all de merchants, officers, and gentlemen privateers.’
-
-On asking him for news, he told us that many privateers were in the
-harbour, and that their crews having had reasonably good luck in
-an expedition to the main, were spending their money in the usual
-fashion ashore; information which pleased us the more, as we would
-probably have our pick and choice of good men. So next day we ran
-in among very intricate sand-banks, which lie at the mouth of the
-harbour, and presently saw the houses of Port Royal, with hundreds
-of artificers labouring to construct forts and bastions and such
-works around them, disposed so as to command the entrance to the
-harbour completely. Inside, in the smooth water, rode many brave
-merchant ships and certain smaller barks, which, I believe, had often
-brought destruction upon the Spanish towns of the main; but these
-last seemed empty, except a negro or two left in charge of them, all
-hands being carousing on shore. We dropped our anchor in a suitable
-place, and cast lots who should remain on board to take charge of the
-schooner, while the rest went into the town. The die fell upon Black
-Diamond, and the Mosquito men stayed on board voluntarily, intending,
-however, to put off in a canoe during the day to strike fish upon
-the sand-banks and the little islands near the Palisades. Captain
-Jem, Nicky, and myself went ashore in the pilot’s canoe, meaning to
-make the necessary arrangements for the further prosecution of our
-voyage. We found Port Royal very bustling and busy. As I have said,
-the people were occupied in building great fortifications, under the
-direction of officers in the English uniform, some of the workmen
-being, as we heard, criminals, others negro slaves, and the rest
-free labourers, either white or black. On the beach, great crowds of
-negroes were rolling down casks to the water’s edge, or along the
-wharfs, where the boats of the ships in the harbour were awaiting
-them; these labourers being generally naked except a pair of light
-drawers and a tattered shirt, and shouting, and chattering, and
-laughing to each other, while the white drivers, who walked amongst
-them with great broad-brimmed hats, very often interrupted their
-conversations with a smart crack of the whip, and a harsh order to
-labour on. Passing through these busy crowds, and amongst great
-heaps of goods, such as bales and casks just landed from England,
-and masses of shipping stores, over which grave merchants and
-supercargoes were busy with pen and ink, comparing invoices, bills
-of lading, and what not, and wrangling about qualities and freights,
-we emerged among the houses of the town, which were in general mean,
-and but of one story, built indeed commonly of wood, with shingle
-roofs, which rattled in the sea-breeze, and often sheltered by orange
-trees covered at once with fruit and bright flowers, and mangoes with
-their heavy foliage, and tamarinds, with branching feathery leaves,
-and long waving pods. The houses had great open casements and covered
-galleries, called jalousies, with pillars, round which many gaudy
-creeping plants clung. Here there were great stores, with all manner
-of commodities, and there, vast taverns, from the open windows of
-which we could hear loud roaring songs in French and English, and a
-great clatter of glasses; and now and then, when the noise somewhat
-lulled, the rattle of dice. The streets, which were very narrow,
-dusty, and irregular, were crowded with groups of half-drunken seamen
-and their trulls, gangs of negroes carrying great baskets of fruit
-and vegetables on their heads down to the harbour, with planters upon
-horseback, who rode along scattering the crowd right and left, and
-bullock-carts, which creaked and rumbled by, laden with kegs of sugar
-or rum, and drawn by oxen, all slavering at the mouth, and seeming
-half dead with dust and heat. Through these crowded and smothering
-streets, Captain Jem, who was our leader, pushed along with the air
-of a man who knew his business and could do it. He was often stopped
-and accosted by his acquaintances, many of whom professed themselves
-surprised to see him, as they heard that he had been murdered by the
-Spaniards in Hispaniola.
-
-‘What! Stout Jem, still in the land of the living?’ said one man, a
-very tall personage, burnt almost black by the sun, wearing great
-moustaches, and having a hanger fixed to a broad leathern belt—‘what!
-Stout Jem again! Why, my lad, we drank a rousing glass to thy memory
-no later than the night before last, at Nance Finlayson’s on the
-quay. We heard that the Spaniards had sent thee from Hispaniola to a
-hotter place still.’
-
-‘No, no, Captain Archemboe,’ quoth our commander; ‘they tried, but
-having failed, we mean to have our revenge.’
-
-‘What! and you have left the wild bulls and are for the sea again? It
-doth thee honour, man. Hunters are but gentlemen butchers after all.
-The sea, sir—the sea, with a tight ship, and tight lads for a crew,
-and reasonable good luck among the galleons—that, sir, is the field,
-and these be the chances for gentlemen! They tell me that Davis hath
-come in from the main after a very good cruise, so now I am bound
-shoreward to see my ancient friend, who, I warrant thee, will screw
-gold out of the Spaniards, though he squeeze them till it distil at
-each pore. I give you good day—I give you good day!’
-
-And so, calling to an attendant negro, this formidable gentleman
-passed on. Captain Jem told us that his name was Crashaw, and that
-he had been a valiant buccaneer under Mansneldt, but was now retired
-from the sea, and very rich. He cultivated considerable plantations,
-and had shares in many privateers. Our object was, however, first
-to see a person of Captain Jem’s acquaintance, who was an old man,
-a money-lender and usurer, and a sort of agent for many of the
-buccaneers, as it was necessary that we should obtain certain stores
-upon credit before setting out upon our voyage, and this old man
-was in use to serve privateers in such matters. Accordingly, we
-presently came to a long, rambling sort of house, in which was a
-great open store, full of goods of all kinds, while vast masses of
-ship furniture and implements, such as stones, anchors, boats, and
-the like, lay under sheds around. There were many seafaring people
-viewing the property, and chaffering with the clerks and workmen
-who sold the goods. But Captain Jem passing through them into the
-store, amid the bows and congratulations of many there, we followed
-him through a small door and sundry passages into a distant room,
-within which we heard a rustling of paper, and presently, Captain
-Jem pushing open the door, we found ourselves in the company of an
-aged man, with long white hair, a thin face, and very bright grey
-eyes, who was seated at a desk, he wearing a dirty, greasy doublet,
-all ink-stains, and loose pantouffles, or breeches, much too big for
-him. Upon sight of Captain Jem, he got up hurriedly and shook him
-very cordially by the hand, saying, like the other, that he never
-thought to have seen him again, for that the Spaniards were reported
-to have made but short work of all the English and French hunters
-on the northern coast of Hispaniola. Upon this Captain Jem told him
-how we had captured a very fine Spanish vessel, and designed to put
-to sea again directly; but that in the meantime he must furnish us
-with sufficient stores and ammunition, and so become a partner in the
-enterprise. The old man at first shook his head.
-
-‘Look ye,’ said he, ‘little is done now-a-days save by fleets. My
-good friend Captain Morgan, a very brave man, and wise in those
-things, ever recommends union. The Spaniards’ treasure-ships commonly
-sail in squadrons, and heavily armed; and their towns along the coast
-are very securely guarded, so that there is usually hard fighting
-before these be come at. However,’ quoth he, ‘I have great confidence
-in you, Ezra Hoskins—or Stout Jem, as I hear they call you—and
-provided your crew be such as I approve of, why I will stand the risk
-of loss in the venture, being well assured that you and your men will
-do their best for me and for themselves.’
-
-At this, Captain Jem re-assured the old gentleman very warmly, and
-then it was settled that he should come aboard the ship that evening,
-to see what might be wanting, and how many guns we could stow. After
-this he ordered refreshments of spirits and tobacco, and while we
-were smoking, he called a young clerk, and writing a short letter,
-gave it him, with instructions that he was to carry it at once to the
-jailor of the town prison, who would thereupon bring Alonzo Peres
-before us. The old man, observing that we looked inquiringly at each
-other, told us that a vessel, in which he had no mean share, being
-cruising in the Gulf of Darien, had fallen in with and captured a
-Spanish Barco del Aviso, or packet-boat, which had, however, as
-usual, thrown her despatches overboard in a sealed leaden case. But
-the captain of this barco proving, when made a prisoner, a cowardly
-fellow who would reveal all he knew of the movements of the richly
-laden ships belonging to his countrymen, the English had kept this
-man a prisoner on board, while they dismissed his comrades in a
-piragua, intending to get all the information they could out of him.
-
-‘Therefore,’ quoth our old gentleman, who I found was called
-Pratt—‘therefore, we will have him here, and examine him. The bark
-which took him has gone to the Pearl Islands on the Mosquito shore,
-and perhaps he can give some information which may guide you on your
-cruise.’
-
-So presently the Spaniard was brought in pinioned, and led by two
-men. He was a very big man, but with scowling and mean features;
-and by his air and complexion, he seemed to have been lying weeping
-in the straw of his dungeon. On seeing us, he immediately began, in
-the Spanish language, to pray, in the name of all things holy, that
-we should dismiss him, and let him go back to the mainland to his
-daughter Paquitta, whom he loved very dearly, pitiably exclaiming
-that he was a poor man, who had been ruined; still that he wished the
-English no harm, and would pray for them for ever, if they would only
-let him go.
-
-But Pratt cut him short in his lamentings, and proceeded to ask, in
-Spanish, which he spoke very fluently, a great number of questions,
-as to the trade between Carthagena and Old Spain, and as to when
-certain richly-laden ships—the names whereof Pratt had at hand in a
-great register—would sail out of that port. To all this the Spaniard
-replied very amply and humbly, and said, in particular, that a large
-ship, in which was embarked a considerable quantity of pieces of
-eight, and silver plate to a much greater amount, but he could not
-say exactly how much, would probably be ready for sea, and put out in
-about two mouths’ time. This ship carried, he informed us, a private
-venture, and would not have convoy. Moreover, she was old, and a
-very slow sailer, and that the merchant who freighted her was the
-more confident that she would escape, inasmuch as it was reported and
-believed in Carthagena, that all the buccaneers were upon the point
-of joining their strength in Jamaica, and landing about Porto Bello,
-with the intention of crossing the isthmus, and making a descent upon
-Panama and the shores of the South Sea. This account the traitor
-confirmed with abundance of oaths, calling upon us to believe him the
-more, inasmuch as, quoth he, ‘I have now no reason to tell you a lie;
-I stand in your power, and if you hear more certain news, which is
-likely, and it contradict what I have said, why I am in your hands to
-work your will on!’ And with that the pitiful-hearted creature began
-to sob and weep again. Truly, I had never seen so small a soul in so
-big, lusty, and goodly a body.
-
-Having made his disclosures, Pratt told the Spaniard that he should
-no more go to prison, but live there in his house, and if all turned
-out to be true as he had stated, that he would have his liberty,
-and, it might be, a reward beside. So he being dismissed, we talked
-the thing over, and determined to propose to the crew a cruise on
-the Darien coast, and perhaps to look into the Gulf of Venezuela.
-We then took leave of Mr. Pratt with many courtesies, and returned
-towards the beach. On our way hither, we heard a great tumult and
-clamour, and, turning down a narrow lane into the street from whence
-it proceeded, saw, what was to me a new and strange sight. In an
-open space, which partially commanded the sea, and backed by a great
-tavern with verandahs and galleries, was assembled a crowd of people,
-men and women, white, brown, and black, drinking, smoking, dicing,
-and swearing. There were tables and huge benches scattered about,
-and sitting on these in every attitude, or lying on the ground, not
-being able either to sit or stand, were the people of this strange
-company. In the centre of the carousing place, was a great cask with
-the head knocked out, and from it a half-drunken seaman, with a
-face of leering shyness, was drawing forth wine in a broken bucket,
-and pouring it into the glasses, mugs, and pipkins, held out to him
-on all sides. Most of the men were white seamen, and they sprawled
-over the tables and benches, with tobacco pipes in their mouths,
-and waved their glasses, and sang loud catches and songs, in which
-the shrill screaming voices of the women rose above their hoarse
-bawling. Most of these women seemed of the sort which frequent the
-streets in Wapping, and rob the seamen; others were half-bloods,
-being mulattos; or mustafees—that is to say, three-parts Indian;
-or quadroons—that is to say, three-parts white. But they were all
-dressed in flaunting gauds, and the sparkle of jewellery flashed
-upon their brown skins, as they flung their arms about, and rattled
-dice, or swallowed liquor like the men. Every now and then a brawl
-would arise, and knives would straightway glitter in the air, and
-loud thick voices would shout out oaths and exclamations in English,
-and French, and Low Dutch. But the general feeling of the revellers
-being pacific, the combatants would be straightway torn asunder, and
-perhaps flung upon the ground, to the danger of their bones; after
-which, the orgies would proceed as before; the men would rush in
-staggering groups up to the cask, or would produce their dice again,
-or greasy packs of cards—a species of gambling we learned from the
-French—and set themselves to play, some with great gravity and in
-silence, others shouting and yelling as luck turned for or against
-them, and all of them tossing about handfuls of gold and silver, such
-as dollars and doubloons, as though the money had been dirt; until,
-perhaps, a party would break out into a loud roaring song, all curses
-of the Spaniards, which heating them to the highest pitch, they would
-start up, the women with them, hallooing and screaming like fiends,
-and capering and jumping, tossing over benches and tables upon the
-ground, and at last drawing forth, and brandishing their hangers, and
-firing their pistols in the air!
-
-In the very midst of this riotous assemblage, a man, not very
-sober, but not very drunk, got upon the top of an empty cask, he
-being supported at the legs by the same Crashaw we had met, and
-bawled out in a thundering voice that he was going to sell certain
-commissions to cruise against and capture Spanish vessels, and
-that those gentlemen privateers who designed shortly to go to sea
-again, would do well to hearken, and if possible purchase, as the
-commissions would be sold very cheap, and their product would be
-spent in wine, to be drunk out at that present sitting by all the
-honourable company. At this announcement there was a general uproar
-of approbation, and Captain Jem, plucking my sleeve, said, that
-hero might be matter which concerned us, and, having whispered that
-the man on the cask was Captain Davis, of whom Crashaw had spoken,
-we made our way through the throng, who indeed received us very
-cordially, everywhere holding up full glasses of wine and brandy, and
-pressing us to drink. Meanwhile Davis recognised Captain Jem, and,
-jumping down from the cask, bade him welcome. Seats were immediately
-procured for us, by the summary process of flinging their former
-occupants on the ground, and we lit pipes and jingled glasses, like
-the rest; although I do not know a more disgusting thing than when
-a sober man comes into the company of many who are drunken, and has
-yet, in a certain degree, to conform to the humour of those about
-him. From Davis, Captain Jem at once procured such a commission as he
-thought we wanted. I did not see what mighty good the document could
-do us; but it seems to have been a fancy of our commander’s, and for
-the paper we agreed to pay a couple of doubloons, for which we gave
-an order upon Mr. Pratt, which was immediately sent into the tavern,
-and shortly re-appeared in the shape of an additional keg of wine,
-although that in the cask was not yet, by any means, consumed. But
-when the Buccaneers saw the fresh liquor, they flung their lighted
-tobacco-pipes into the old cask, and then, with drunken glee, drew
-forth great mugs and glassfuls, with which they besprinkled each
-other, and at last upset the cask, treading, trampling, and dancing
-in the spilt wine, until they had churned it into red mud.
-
-You may be sure that we were anxious enough to get away from these
-mad revellers, who, after the foolish fashion of too many sailors,
-both abroad and at home, were spending, in a few hours or days of
-insane debauchery, the money which they had risked their lives for
-months to obtain. At first, they were not willing to let us go,
-insisting that since we had paid for the additional keg of wine, we
-should bide the drinking of it out; but upon our telling them that
-we were busily engaged in fitting out a privateer, and that the Blue
-Peter would speedily be hoisted at the fore, they consented to let us
-depart—first drinking success to our cruise in great bumpers, with
-cheering and firing of pistols, and almost every man shouting out
-some advice, as to whither we ought to proceed. Here was one bawling
-out in favour of the Mosquito Coast; and there another screaming that
-most booty would be found to the eastward of the Gulf of Venezuela.
-At length, we got free, and devoted ourselves for some days to
-preparing the schooner, internally, for the accommodation of a larger
-crew than she had ever before carried.
-
-There was no lack of hands, for Captain Jem was known as a commander,
-and as soon as we hoisted the Blue Peter, seamen came off in great
-numbers and applied to ship with us. Captain Jem personally examined
-all claimants, and when they passed his scrutiny successfully, it
-was for those who already formed the crew to receive or reject them.
-In this way, in a couple of days we were well manned by thirty-six
-stout seamen, including our original party. Except two Frenchmen
-and one Dutchman, all the new part of the crew was English. Our
-boatswain was a short, square-shouldered, powerful man, who had once
-commanded a ship, and was a good West-Indian pilot. His name was
-John Clink. We had also a good carpenter, and what was of almost as
-great importance, a surgeon, esteemed very skilful, a young Scotsman,
-like myself, bred in the University of Glasgow, and very eager in
-prosecuting researches into the natural history and productions of
-the teeming islands and continents of the West. The surgeon’s name
-was Wood. Meantime, Old Pratt had come on board, and after inspecting
-the schooner, presently sent four guns, with a great quantity of
-ammunition, and near sixty stand of musketry, with boarding-pikes,
-cutlasses, and hangers in proportion. We also carried a great boat
-which took up almost all the space between the masts, and we slightly
-altered the rigging of the schooner, setting up square foretopsails
-and foresails, so as to make her handier going before the wind. Our
-victualling being now completed, and all things ready for sea, we
-had, as is usual among Buccaneers, a general meeting of the crew to
-determine and sign articles. A paper of indenture was drawn up by
-Mr. Pratt, and to it we all affixed our names, or our marks. First,
-the indenture stipulated that the terms upon which the voyage was
-to be undertaken, were ‘no prey, no pay.’ Then it was provided,
-that all the booty obtained, of whatsoever nature, should be flung
-into one general stock, nobody whatsoever keeping anything back for
-himself, but acting fairly and honourably to his comrades; out of
-this common fund all were to be paid in due proportion, considering
-their station on board, or their share in the venture. First came the
-proprietors of the ship, who were three—being Le Picard, Nicky, and
-myself, for they did not count the Indian. A certain proportion was
-awarded to us, in the capacity which I have mentioned, and another
-proportion to Mr. Pratt, calculated by the value of the sea-stock,
-&c., wherewith he had supplied us. Then the salaries of the captain,
-the quartermaster, the boatswain, the carpenter, and the surgeon
-were fixed, and certain sums were determined upon, to be given in
-compensation for the different species of wounds which we might
-receive. These compensations were upon the following scale, and
-they applied alike to all the ship’s company. The loss of a right
-arm, six hundred pieces of eight, or six slaves; of a left arm,
-five hundred pieces, or five slaves; for a right leg the same; for
-a left leg, four hundred pieces of eight, or four slaves; for an
-eye one hundred pieces of eight, or one slave; and for a finger the
-like sum. As for the proportion of pay, the captain had as much as
-five ordinary seamen, and the quartermaster, or master’s mate, which
-was my station, that of two. The rest of the crew shared equally,
-and two boys whom we had on board drew the pay of one able-bodied
-man. Furthermore, it was stipulated, that each mariner, without any
-distinction of rank, should be daily entitled to two full meals of
-the ship’s stores, besides what game or fresh meat we might fall in
-with, and the indenture concluded by reciting that all those who
-signed it by name or mark, did thereby take a solemn oath, not to
-hide or conceal from their comrades the slightest article of value
-which they might become possessed of, but to fling all, without let
-or drawback, into the common fund. This document was committed to the
-care of Mr. Pratt, and a copy made by one of his clerks, which was
-deposited in the main cabin, and of free access to all. It was then
-proclaimed that next morning, on the setting in of the sea-breeze,
-which, on the southern side of the island, is favourable for leaving
-the coast, we would weigh anchor and stand off upon our voyage—so
-all was bustle and hurry—the schooner being surrounded by fleets of
-canoes, selling vegetables, fruit, and such wares, to be added to the
-sea stock of all who were minded to purchase them.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XII.
-
-OF THE DEATH OF AN OLD FRIEND.
-
-
-About sunset, Captain Jem came up to me, and inquired whether I had
-any final business to settle ashore, in which case he could spare me
-a couple of hours, but no more. I replied, that I had no reason for
-quitting the vessel, when all at once, the thought of my preserver
-on board the French felucca, Wright, flashed upon me. I remembered
-how he had told me, that he lived in Jamaica, at Port Royal in all
-probability, and I reproached myself for not having before thought
-of inquiring after him. So I proceeded on shore at once, and went
-straight to Mr. Pratt’s, who I imagined would be likely to give me
-the information of which I stood in need. Nor was I disappointed.
-Mr. Pratt, indeed, knew no person of the name of Wright, but he
-had frequently seen the man to whom my description must apply, and
-whose real name was Blagrove. ‘He lives,’ said Mr. Pratt, ‘in great
-retirement, dwelling in a small hut on the outskirts of the town, and
-cultivating, with two or three negroes, such a small plantation, as
-suffices to supply him with the necessaries of life.’
-
-Mr. Pratt then, at my request, called a negro lad, and ordered him
-to be my guide to Blagrove’s dwelling; adding, however, that the
-old Cromwellian lived in such solitude, and hated the faces of
-strangers so cordially, that he doubted whether I should be admitted.
-Determined, however, to make the experiment, I set off, the negro
-preceding me with a lantern. After clearing the town we had a rough
-and rugged walk, through trees and plantations, and deep Guinea
-grass, already drenched with dew. Fire-flies sparkled in every bush,
-and the hum of innumerable insects, and the harsh croaking of frogs
-in the swamps and ditches, made a melancholy music. At length we
-descried a distant light gleaming amid trees; at the sight of it, the
-negro stopped, and pointing, said, ‘Dat Massa Blagrove’s house!’ at
-the same time making as though he would return.
-
-‘Well,’ said I, ‘do you not intend to come on and light me to the
-door?’
-
-The negro suddenly fell upon his knees. ‘Oh, Massa, please not
-insist; let Juba go back, now. Massa Blagrove terrible man, Obeah
-man, no like oder white buccra; live all alone by himself, wid
-Fetish. Oh, most great heaps of Fetish.’
-
-Now, at this time I did not understand the negro at all. I knew not
-what he meant by Obeah or Fetish, but I afterwards found that the
-gloomy life and austere manners of the old Republican, had caused the
-negroes to believe that he was a sorcerer, or being of supernatural
-powers, and that they dreaded above all things being obliged to enter
-his grounds after dark. Seeing Mr. Pratt’s negro, however, in a state
-of visible terror, at the idea of proceeding further, but having no
-time to stay to investigate the cause, I took the lantern from his
-hand, and told him to remain where he was until I came back. This he
-promised to do, but I had hardly advanced two paces, when I heard
-him scampering away through the rustling grass as fast as his legs
-could carry him. I called after the fugitive, but he gave no reply,
-so after muttering a curse upon his cowardice, I consoled myself by
-the reflection that he would be likely to get a sound flogging from
-Mr. Pratt for returning without the lantern, and then slowly advanced
-towards the light, which yet glimmered through the trees. I was not
-long in ascertaining that it shone from the rude window of a wattled
-hut, over which the branches of a great tree waved and rustled in the
-land wind. Having found the door, I knocked repeatedly, but received
-no reply, and as I stood listening, I thought I heard the sound
-of smothered moans. Thereupon I lifted the latch—the door was not
-otherwise secured—and entered. The cottage consisted of but one room,
-very rudely furnished. Hoes and spades, and such like implements,
-lay in the corners. There was a massive oaken table in the centre of
-the room, and at one end of it stood the candle, whose light I had
-seen from without. Hanging from the roof, close to the table, was
-a sort of rude curtain of canvas, which screened off a portion of
-the chamber, and from behind this curtain I heard the moaning come
-again: after hesitating for a moment I stepped forward and removed
-the drapery. Upon a low bed, without any curtains, his head and chest
-supported by a bag, such as that in which seamen keep their clothes,
-lay Wright, or Blagrove—now, alas, a dying man. He was terribly
-wasted, as though by fever or ague; his grey eyes so sunken that they
-seemed to gleam from the bottom of dark holes, and his features were
-shrunk and distorted, for the fingers of Death were pressing them.
-The sick man took no notice of me, so that I could mark a large Bible
-in which he seemed to have been reading, and which had fallen from
-his pithless hand upon the bed.
-
-‘Mr. Wright,’ I said. He replied not a word.
-
-‘John Blagrove,’ I repeated.
-
-He started, and said feebly, ‘I am he—who calls?’
-
-‘Leonard Lindsay,’ I replied, ‘the Scots mariner, whom you aided to
-escape from the ship of Montbars.’
-
-‘Lindsay—Lindsay!’ he muttered, ‘I know not that name.’ He paused,
-and then said loudly and clearly, ‘Death—my voice is for death. He
-hath most foully betrayed his great trust, and the blood of the
-saints crieth against him. By what law, sayest thou, shall we put him
-to death? Even by that which gave Jericho and its people to the sword
-of Joshua, the son of Nun.’
-
-Listening to this, I saw that the mind of the dying man was running
-upon the great action of his life, and forbore to disturb him. But
-presently the delirium fit seemed to pass away, and he stirred
-restlessly, and muttered that he was athirst. I looked round the
-cottage, and finding a pitcher of water and a mug, held the latter
-to his lips; when he had drunk he seemed revived, shut his eyes for
-a moment, and then, opening them, fixed his gaze upon me, and smiled
-faintly.
-
-‘I know you now,’ he said; ‘how came you here?’
-
-Feeling that his time was but short, I hurriedly replied, that having
-arrived at Jamaica from Hispaniola, I had heard that he resided here,
-and had lost no time in coming to see, and thank him.
-
-‘You will see the last of me, then,’ he murmured; ‘I told you I
-should rest in the wilderness, and I am fast going to that long home.’
-
-I asked him if he had not had proper medicines and help in his fever.
-
-‘No,’ he replied, ‘none; I did not wish to live. I left myself in the
-hands of God. He has called my soul, and I obey the summons as firmly
-as I can.’
-
-‘But surely,’ quoth I, ‘you require help—attendance?’
-
-‘None,’ says he—‘a man can die alone. When I felt the delirium coming
-on, yesterday, and knew that my hour was at hand, I called together
-my four slaves and gave them their liberty. They went singing and
-shouting away, and I remained here waiting for the last moment with
-contrition, and prayer, and praise.’
-
-After this he was silent for a long time. Then he said, ‘Once I was
-a judge at a great trial, now I go to be judged for my judgment.
-Then, I did that which I believed to be right and good. I am of the
-same mind still. Before an hour, I shall know whether my voice spoke
-justly or no.’
-
-A very dismal silence succeeded. Blagrove was sinking very fast.
-When I took his hand it was cold and wet, and his breath began to
-come in flutterings and gaspings. While I watched him, the light,
-which burned in a rude iron candlestick, suddenly flickered and went
-out; and, except for the glimmer of my lantern, we were in darkness.
-Indeed, it was very terrible. The great branches of the tree overhead
-groaned as they swayed with the night wind, and sometimes hit the
-roof with a loud rattle; the dismal croak of the frog sounded
-incessantly; and the goat-sucker whooped his loud hollow note from
-the forest. As I watched the dying, I suddenly heard the lattice of
-the window shake, and, turning round with a start, saw a hideous
-black face, crowned with a curly mass of grey hair, laid close
-against the coarse thick glass. My heart beat, and my blood curdled
-as I gazed. In a moment, however, the face was withdrawn, and I was
-vainly attempting to persuade myself that the vision I had seen was
-fancy, when, by the uncertain light of the lantern, I observed the
-latch of the door move. The cold sweat came out upon me again as the
-door opened, and a hideous apparition entered. It was that of a very
-aged negro woman. Her face had that peculiar blackness which marks
-those negroes actually born on the Guinea coast; and it was, so to
-speak, a perfect mass of huge wrinkles and skinny folds, through
-which her white teeth appeared with a ghastly conspicuousness. The
-principal part of her dress was an old dingy blanket; and round her
-neck was hung a cord, upon which shreds of cloth, birds’ feathers,
-pellets of clay and stones with holes in them—the shells of eggs, and
-fragments of broken bottles were strung. This uncouth being advanced
-slowly into the hut, holding up in both hands a sort of graven image,
-or idol, made of a block of wood roughly carved, and stuck over with
-such scraps of offal and filth as composed her own rude necklace.
-I was so absorbed in a sort of compassionate horror, that I had no
-power to prevent her approach, but rather shrank from her—the hag
-looked so fearful and witch-like. So she proceeded to the very side
-of the bed—Blagrove, meanwhile, having his eyes shut and his hands
-clasped, as though in secret prayer—and then suddenly dropping on her
-knees, she raised her hideous idol before the face of the dying, and
-said, in a harsh grating voice:
-
-‘Buccra dying—buccra pray to Obi.’
-
-Coming to myself at these words, I dashed forwards, wrenched the idol
-from the hands of the idolatress, and flung the hag back towards the
-door. She turned upon me with the fury of a wild cat.
-
-‘What for you here?’ she said; ‘he is Obeah man, me is Obeah woman.
-Obeah men and women pray to Obi. It is one great Fetish.’
-
-For reply I walked to the door, and, opening it, flung the idol forth
-into the night. When I turned again, the hag was affixing a bunch of
-parrot feathers to the bed.
-
-‘I set Obi for him,’ she cried; ‘I set Obi for you. De Fetish hab
-kill him—de Fetish will kill you.’
-
-Blagrove at this started up in bed—‘I am getting blind,’ he said,
-faintly; ‘what voice is that?’
-
-‘De voice of Mammy Koromantee—of de Obeah woman,’ said the hag; ‘de
-moder of Paul, your negro, dat you set free. Paul say you die; I
-bring Obi for you to pray to—Obi great.’
-
-‘Lindsay, Leonard Lindsay,’ gasped Blagrove, ‘come close to
-me—quick!—I am choking. Keep her away, fling down the strange
-god—fling Dagon from the high places.’
-
-I now supported his head, and saw that the great change was at hand.
-
-‘Mary, Mary,’ he said faintly; ‘I come, Mary, my wife.’
-
-There passed a spasm over his face, and then his head hung heavy
-and dead across my arm. Immediately, the negress raised her voice,
-tremulous with age, and began to chant a sort of song—perhaps it was
-a dirge, in her own tongue.
-
-‘Go,’ said I, interrupting her lament—‘go to Mr. Pratt’s, and tell
-them that Blagrove is dead; they will return with you, and I will
-give you money.’
-
-‘You gib me money,’ said the negress, quickly; ‘oh, den I go to Massa
-Pratt’s, and I find Obi when de daylight come.’
-
-With this the hag bustled out as speedily as her old limbs would
-bear her, and in less than an hour Mr. Pratt and some of his people
-arrived. I paid the old woman her guerdon, and was glad to be
-relieved from my melancholy post—Mr. Pratt assuring me that all
-needful attention would be bestowed upon the dead. As for the woman,
-he said that she was more than half crazed with age and infirmity;
-but that in coming to the hut he believed that, after her own
-fashion, she had meant kindly. She was reputed by the negroes to
-be an Obeah woman, or witch, and the scraps of feathers, rags and
-egg-shells wherewith she had adorned herself were the means by which
-she wrought her spells and incantations.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIII.
-
-THE BUCCANEERS SAIL FOR THE SPANISH MAIN, AND ARE CHASED BY A GREAT
-SHIP OF WAR.
-
-
-In an hour after these events, I was on board the ‘Will o’ the Wisp,’
-greatly to the relief of Captain Jem, who feared, from my long stay,
-that some evil had befallen me; and with the first puff of sea-breeze
-in the morning, we were gliding past the point of the Pallisades out
-into the open ocean, on my first buccaneering voyage. As the sun
-rose into a cloudless sky, the merry trade-wind freshened until it
-tore up the tops of the long swells into ridges of rolling foam, and
-caused the schooner to careen gaily over, so that the water buzzed,
-and gushed, and gurgled in the lee-scupper holes. Then my spirits,
-which all night long had been heavy and depressed, rose with every
-mile of sea which rolled between us and the land, and I felt as
-elated and merry, bound upon a wild and venturesome expedition to an
-unhealthy and little known coast, as when the ‘Golden Grove’ raised
-her anchor from the sands of Leith, and I expected in due time to see
-the hills of Italy and Greece.
-
-We had a fierce and wild-looking crew, wearing in their dress the
-fashions of many lands; some were clad in jackets cut out of rich
-brocades and stuffs captured from the Spaniards. Others had doublets
-of hide. All wore moustachioes and beards, and carried great
-broad-bladed knives stuck into girdles of leather, or neatly twisted
-yarn. The experience of a few days showed us that we were manned by
-active and skilful seamen, one or two who turned out inferior in
-this respect being set to duties fitted for them, such as cooking,
-serving out the provisions from the casks, and helping the carpenter
-or sail-maker. Moreover, the men seemed tractable as well as handy
-fellows, and were on very good terms with each other, and quite
-delighted with the captain and the ship. To this there was but one
-exception—a sailor from London, called Bell. This man was sullen,
-sulky, and lazy, and Captain Jem having found him skulking from work,
-upon one occasion, when the wind blew very fresh, and the whole crew
-were on deck taking in sail, gave him so strong a hint with the flat
-of his cutlass, that for some time, at least, there was no repetition
-of the offence.
-
-On the third day, after losing sight of Jamaica, soon after sunrise,
-we descried a great sail to windward. The weather was then almost
-calm, and the swell trifling. Still the appearance of the sky was,
-as we thought, threatening. The sun had risen of a fiery red, and
-huge fleecy banks of vapour brooded over the ocean. The sail must
-have been for some time in sight ere we had distinguished it from
-the wreaths of white morning mist which here and there floated
-over the water; but having made it out, we knew that so great a
-spread of canvas must arise from a stately ship. Now, if she were
-an Englishman, a Frenchman, or a Dutchman, we had nothing to say to
-her, whereas if she were a Spaniard, she must be either an exceeding
-rich merchantman, in which case it was our business to speak her as
-fast as possible, or she was a man-of war, in which case, we could
-hardly pack too much canvas upon the schooner to get her out of such
-a dangerous neighbourhood. However, the ship had the weather-guage of
-us; she would bring down the sea-breeze with her, and all we could
-do was to lie idly upon the swell, watching her motions. For myself,
-I climbed to the schooner’s main-topmast, with the best perspective
-glass we had on board; and I had not been long there before I could
-plainly perceive that our big neighbour had felt the power of the
-sea-breeze, for she rose fast, spreading her great sheets of canvas
-out, like wings, and coming directly down upon us.
-
-Captain Jem then hailed me eagerly from the deck, asking whether she
-looked like a merchant ship or a frigate. At first, I could give
-little satisfaction to his questions, as the stranger was coming
-directly towards us; but presently, whether from bad steering or not
-I am unaware, she gave a sheer to starboard, and lifting that moment
-upon a swell, I saw that she carried a great broadside of heavy guns,
-with a very high poop, rising I am sure forty feet above the water,
-and all encrusted, as it were, with galleries and carved windows,
-after the fashion in which the Spaniards build their men-of-war.
-Upon this intelligence, we prepared for immediate flight. We were
-to leeward, and so had nothing for it but to run before the wind.
-As yet, however, only those little puffs or airs called by sailors
-cat’s-paws, the precursors of the coming wind, were stealing over the
-great shiny backs of the smooth lazy swells, whereas the Spanish
-frigate, for such we doubted her not to be, was in the midst of
-roughened water, and rolling two great ridges of white foam, from
-beneath her bows. How we cursed the chance which condemned us to
-lie idle on the ocean, when a formidable enemy was swooping down
-upon us, with a wind which made his heaviest canvas surge, and his
-stout masts bend and creak. Meantime, however, we prepared to set
-studding-sails, and indeed hoisted them to be ready for the first
-of the coming breeze, at the same time, by the help of a sweep or
-great oar swinging round the head of the schooner in the direction
-which circumstances compelled us to take. This manœuvre was instantly
-observed on board the great ship, for she straightway fired a cannon,
-and hauled up the gorgeous ensign of Spain to her main-topmast head,
-where it streamed forth in all its red and yellow glory. The next
-moment a bright spout of flame flashed from the Spaniard’s bows,
-and the ball came skipping along the sea, making its last plunge
-not a quarter of a mile from us. But almost at the same moment our
-sails flapped and surged, then steadily swelling out, the schooner
-began to slip through the water. Seeing this, the Spaniards fired
-again and again; but without effect. Meantime, we were hard at work,
-setting every stitch of canvas we could get to draw, and presently
-we had quite enough of wind for the safety of our spars, the breeze
-driving before it that heavy pelting shower, which often falls soon
-after sunrise, and which sailors call the Pride of the Morning. The
-‘Will-o’-the-Wisp’ was now careering along at her full speed, rolling
-heavily before the great following surges, which would often rise in
-white foam, hissing and glancing round her stern, and then melting,
-as it were, from beneath her, would sweep on, while the schooner
-plunged heavily down into the trough, her sails flapping like thunder
-in the lull, and then tearing and struggling, as though they would
-drag the masts out of the keel as the vessel was hove high again
-on the crest of the next following wave. Still the large ship was
-gaining upon us fast. A schooner is a species of vessel unfitted
-to scud before a brisk gale, like a square rigged ship, although in
-beating up to windward, we would most likely have the advantage.
-However, we spread every inch of canvas we could stretch out, and
-Captain Jem and myself both stood by the tiller. In an hour from the
-commencement of the chase, the Spaniard was not a mile astern of us;
-and truly, if the great ship had been a friend, she would have been a
-gay and a gallant sight—with her brave tall masts, and great sheets
-of canvas, which rolled from side to side, like a tower which totters
-in an earthquake, and her vast bows, all carved and encrusted with
-ornaments and devices, which would now plunge deeply into the brine,
-and then rise with the sea water pouring and flashing down, amid the
-sculptures and images of saints and long moulded and fretted ledges
-and serpentine projections of carved wood, which extended in gracious
-undulations on either side of the cut-water. But we had little mind
-to admire the cunning work of the Spanish artificers, although,
-unhappily, every moment we saw it plainer and plainer. Our men began
-to look pale and troubled, and spoke in whispers to each other, and
-some of them lay sullenly down upon the deck. Meanwhile, Captain Jem
-and I consulted together in a low voice, and presently hit upon a
-plan which would give us, at all events, a last chance.
-
-‘Nicky Hamstring,’ said Captain Jem, ‘show the Don a sight of the
-flag which Sir Francis Drake carried against the great Armada.’
-
-At this bold speech, the men seemed to pluck up a little.
-
-‘What, boys!’ quoth brave Jem; ‘you do not mean to stretch out your
-throats to the Spaniard’s whittles?’
-
-‘Where is the use of preaching?’ cries one of the men. ‘If we don’t
-strike and heave-to, he will give us the stem, run his ship crash
-over us, and send us to the bottom before we can say a prayer.’
-
-Captain Jem pulled out a great pistol and cocked it.
-
-‘That was George Bell’s voice!’ he shouted. ‘Hark ye, you snivelling
-cur, say but another syllable of striking or heaving-to, and I’ll
-send you to hell with the word upon your lips. Comrades,’ continued
-the captain, raising his voice, ‘is it fit that brave men and staunch
-should listen to a hen-hearted skulk like the man who spoke?’
-
-‘No, no!’ cried the whole of the crew, ‘no striking; let the Dons do
-their worst.’ And at that moment the ensign of St. George fluttering
-up to the main-topmast head, we greeted it with a cheer, the echo of
-which came back from the broad sails of the Spaniard.
-
-‘Now, men,’ said Captain Jem, ‘be steady and sharp, and in ten
-minutes we shall have the big ship’s weather-guage.’
-
-Several moments passed in perfect silence, broken only by the roar
-of the sea around us, and the great plunges of the Spanish ship, as
-she came careering and wallowing over the waves. We looked back, and
-saw her bows clustered with men, and standing upon the bowsprit, with
-his arm round a stay, we could discern the figure of an officer, with
-a very brave uniform, and holding a trumpet in his hand. Presently
-this officer passed his trumpet to a man who stood by him, and who at
-once hailed in good English. We all heard his words, for they echoed
-loudly between the sails of the two ships.
-
-‘Surrender,’ he said, ‘or we will run the frigate over you.’
-
-‘Stand by your sheets, men,’ said Captain Jem, softly; ‘and never
-fear for all I do, that we are going to run our necks into Spanish
-hemp this cruise.’
-
-‘Do you surrender?’ hailed the Spaniard once more.
-
-There was now not a hundred feet between the man-of-war’s jib and our
-taffrail rail. It was fearful to see the great ship, like a moving
-steeple, rushing down upon us, and, despite of myself, I felt my
-teeth grinding against each other. I looked back once more, there was
-the mighty prow, clustered with men, frowning above us, and ploughing
-the sea into a great furrow of foam. That ship could crush our
-schooner as a rock would smash a pipkin.
-
-Yet no muscle quivered in Captain Jem’s face. All at once he sung
-out, sharp and quick—
-
-‘Nicky, strike the flag.’
-
-The Spanish man-of-war rose upon a great sea, heaving her bows out of
-the water almost to her keel. The next moment she would be crushing
-down bodily upon our deck. Just then the red-cross ensign disappeared
-from the mast-head, and Captain Jem, turning round, took off his hat.
-The officer on the bowsprit of the great ship immediately shouted,
-and as he spoke the vast bows gave a sudden sweep to the port or
-larboard side, almost shaving our taffrail as they grazed past.
-
-‘Now, then!’ roared Captain Jem, ramming down the tiller hard a port.
-‘Sheets, boys, mind your sheets—in with them—in with the larboard
-sheets. Hurrah, boys, hurrah! show the Don that he must shut his
-claws quick, or we will slip through his fingers.’
-
-The words had not been spoken when the Will-o’-the-Wisp flew round
-like a top, in the opposite direction to that of the Spaniard,
-plunging down into one tremendous sea, taking tons upon tons of the
-glancing green water over her weather bow, and then lying over to the
-wind, until the washing seas rose up to the very centre of her deck.
-Of course the studding-sail-booms snapped like pipe-stems, and the
-sails they supported burst away and floated down to leeward. But for
-this we cared very little.
-
-‘If the spars stand it we’re safe,’ shouted the Captain to me.
-
-I looked aloft, the schooner was almost on her broadside, the sea
-pouring over and over us in great curling volumes of blinding spray,
-flashing up high into the rigging, and drenching the surging, tearing
-canvas. This lasted but for a moment. There was a lull, the schooner
-righted in the water, plunged heavily at one or two seas, and then,
-although carrying a fearful press of sail, shot gaily away to
-windward. We looked astern. The Spaniard had been utterly discomfited
-by our manœuvre. After diverging from her course just enough, as
-she thought, to save us from being run down, she had been obliged
-to keep before the wind, being afraid, with all her sail, to try
-the desperate experiment of luffing up, and was now a good mile to
-leeward, her crew busily employed in getting in all her light canvas,
-evidently with the intent of following up the chase.
-
-‘Now, boys!’ called out the captain—‘we have not shaken off the Don
-yet. He has had a taste of our quality, but he will be after us
-again. So while he is amusing himself to leeward yonder, let us get
-in a reef or so, the schooner will make better way through the water
-than when she is dragged down by too great a show of canvas.’
-
-So presently the Will-o’-the-Wisp’ was under suitable sail, working
-hard to windward. Captain Jem was right in saying that the Spaniard
-meant not to give up his prey after one baffled swoop, and in a
-brief space he was close hauled upon the same tack with ourselves,
-careening down to the wind, until we sometimes expected to see him
-turn over bodily. It was lucky for us, that, heeling over so much,
-he could not bring his guns to bear upon the schooner. Once or twice
-he fired a cannon, but the ball must have passed far above us. Our
-own pieces were too small for us to return the compliment, across a
-mile of sea, with any chance of hard hitting; besides, it was our cue
-to trust rather to our legs than our teeth, and to mind our canvas
-rather than our guns.
-
-All that long and anxious day did the Spaniard stick to our skirts.
-Had the breeze been lighter, we would have left him hand over hand,
-but the strong wind, and great tumbling seas, often bore us bodily
-to leeward, while the Spaniard burst through and through them with
-mighty plunges. Such a wind and sea, I repeat, could not but be of
-great advantage to the bigger and heavier ship. Thus it came to pass
-that when the sun touched the western waves, the Spaniard still held
-his position about a mile to leeward of the schooner. We had run more
-than one hundred miles since we hauled our wind, and still for all we
-could see, we had neither lost nor gained an inch.
-
-The night came on, but the wind still howled unabatedly over the
-far-spreading ridges of angry water. There was no moon, and great
-patches of dusky clouds went scudding by between the ocean and the
-stars.
-
-‘Now, my mates,’ quoth Captain Jem—‘we shall find out whether Jack
-Spaniard’s eyes mark well in the dark. Let all lights be extinguished
-in the ship, except the binnacle lantern.’
-
-This order was speedily obeyed, and soon afterwards the binnacle
-lamp was carefully screened, and at the same instant we lit a bright
-lantern, and placed it conspicuously on our lee quarter. By this
-manœuvre it is evident that the Spaniard, if he saw aught, saw but
-one light, as though we carried no more. After this we tacked several
-times, shifting the lantern so as to allow our pursuer a good view of
-it, and make him believe that we were showing the light in bravado.
-By this time it was nine o’clock and the wind was sensibly abating.
-We could see naught of the Spaniard, although many a pair of eyes
-were strained until they ached and throbbed with vain efforts to
-make out the secret of his whereabouts. About ten o’clock, we were
-upon the starboard tack, the schooner then laying a course which
-would have brought her back to Jamaica. A good-sized cask was then
-prepared, by eight twelve-pound balls being cast into it as it stood
-on one end on deck. Then a sort of pole or spar, made out of an oar,
-was fitted into the cask, being stepped as it were amongst the cannon
-balls, and coming up through the opposite head of the cask, like a
-mast through the deck of a ship. This apparatus being well secured
-by stout ropes, was hove overboard, and slackening the lines, we saw
-that it floated perfectly upright. The machine was then hauled in
-again; the lantern which I have already mentioned, was made fast to
-the top of the pole, and then the cask and all were carefully lifted
-over the bulwark, and cast adrift upon the sea; while, at the same
-moment, the tiller was put down, the schooner tilted gaily round
-and filled upon the other tack, and in five minutes we were half a
-mile away from the decoy beacon, which glimmered with an uncertain
-light, as it rose rocking upon the ridges of the seas. In silence and
-in darkness we kept our new course. Happily this was the gloomiest
-period of the night. Lowering banks of cloud lay heavily upon the
-eastern horizon, and the stars only glimmered occasionally through
-the scud. The schooner was kept a little from the wind, so as to make
-her sail her very best, and went careering, as though she bore a
-light heart, across the waves. We saw or heard nothing of our enemy,
-and by midnight we trusted that many a league of ocean rolled between
-our gay schooner and the great Spanish man-of-war.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIV.
-
-THE STRANGE ADVENTURE OF THE UNKNOWN SHOALS AND THE DWARF PILOT.
-
-
-That evening it chanced that I had the mid-watch, and so when the
-dead of the night came, I took charge of the deck, and Captain Jem,
-and all who were not upon duty went below. The weather was moderate,
-with a steady breeze broad upon our larboard beam, as we steered
-almost due south. I walked the deck for nearly three hours without
-having occasion to give an order to one of the watch. I was weary
-and exhausted, for the excitement of the chase had now gone off, and
-as for the seamen around me, they were stretched out dozing here
-and there upon the deck, and as we had a clear sea, and the wind
-held very steady, I was loth to rouse the poor fellows up. There
-was an old grey-headed sailor, whom we called Bristol Tom, at the
-helm, and I sometimes listened to him as he crooned over ancient sea
-ballads, which had been sung by the sailors of Sir Francis Drake, and
-sometimes conversed with him upon the clever style in which we had
-shaken off the Spaniard. So the night waned slowly away. Every ten
-minutes or so I would go forward and cast a long look over the dull
-sea, stretching away before us like a heaving sheet of lead, save
-where here and there it was broken by a dullish white streak, where
-a wave rose higher than common, curled, and broke. At length, it
-wanted but half an hour to the time of my relief, and I sat down upon
-the weather bulwark with my arm round the stay, and began, according
-to my frequent custom, to build very gorgeous castles in the air. I
-thought of the happy day when, having made prize-money sufficient in
-these far-off seas, I would return to Scotland and hear again the
-music which of all others was sweetest to the ear of my memory—the
-voices of my kindred, and the whimpling and gurgling of the Balwearie
-burn, as it trickled down the broomy knowes into the clear pools,
-where, with a running noose made of horsehair, attached to the end
-of a switch, I used to mark and catch the speckled pars. During my
-meditations, it struck me once or twice that the motion of the sea
-was changing; that the flow of the waves was not so uniform, and that
-they jerked the schooner sharply as though she were ploughing a cross
-sea. Thinking, however, that Bristol Tom might be nodding over the
-tiller, I called to him to look sharp and steer fine, to which he
-promptly replied, ‘Ay, ay, sir!’ and my spirit fled away again to the
-bonny shores of Fife. All at once, a low, dull roaring sound, very
-different from the sharp plunges of the schooner, and the seething,
-hissing noise of the seas, as they burst in beds of foam from beneath
-her bows, came floating on the night wind.
-
-‘Bristol Tom!’ I cried, sharply, ‘did you hear nothing like the roar
-of surf?’
-
-‘Lord love ye, sir,’ quoth the steersman, ‘there be no surf but where
-there be land near the top of the sea, and hereabouts five hundred
-fathom of line would reach no bottom.’
-
-‘It must have been the wind eddying in the sail above me,’ I thought,
-but I kept my ears cocked pretty sharply.
-
-Presently, I heard the sound again; there could be no mistake about
-it. There was the hollow boom of great seas breaking over banks of
-sand. I started up, and swung myself on the ledge of the bulwarks.
-
-Not a quarter of a mile on our weather bow I could see a great bed of
-tumbling spray, which gleamed with a pale lustre in the dark.
-
-‘Breakers on the weather bow!’ I shouted. ‘Up, men, up! Keep her
-away, Tom, keep her away. Call all hands!—stand by sheets and
-brails—see all clear with the anchor.’
-
-In a moment the deck of the schooner was alive with startled men, I
-leaped forward, and flung myself on the bowspirit.
-
-‘Breakers right a-head!’ I screamed ‘Up with the helm—hard up.’
-
-‘Breakers on the lee bow!’ sung out two or three voices at once.
-
-We were embayed. The white water tumbled and roared all around us: I
-thought all was over, when right a-head I saw a space of dark sea.
-This might be our salvation.
-
-‘Hold your luff!’ I shouted—‘hold your luff! but keep her well in
-hand. So—steady.’
-
-‘Steady!’ replied Bristol Tom, and the schooner shot through a narrow
-channel—so narrow that the drifting foam of a great surge upon our
-weather bow flew over us in a salt shower. By this time the whole
-crew had tumbled out of their hammocks, and rushed upon deck half
-awake, and calling out to know what was the matter?
-
-‘Down with your helm—hard down!’ I cried again. The schooner swept up
-into the wind, and a great mass of foam seemed as it were to glide
-from beneath her bows.
-
-‘Breakers a-head!’ sung out Nicky Hamstring’s voice as the direction
-of the ship was altered.
-
-‘Keep her away again,’ cried Captain Jem and myself together. The
-bows of the manageable little vessel receded fast from the wind, when
-she sunk in the trough of the tumbling swell, with a jerk and a jar
-which appeared to shake her very ribs.
-
-‘She has struck!’ cried half the crew at once. But the next sea
-hove the ship buoyantly aloft; the wind came down with a heavy
-puff; she bent over before its influence, and for near five minutes
-rushed madly on amid the broken water which flashed and glanced upon
-either side of us; now, by a sudden twitch of the rudder, and a
-rapid jibbing of the sails, avoiding a reef, or spit of sand which
-lay directly across her course—anon, running along a belt of white
-water, until, mayhap, a sudden bend of the reef caused us to whirl
-the schooner right into the wind’s eye again, and try to beat slowly
-up the tortuous channels, expecting every moment to be flung with
-a crash upon a ledge of coral rocks. All this time the men were
-working to clear the anchor, and just as the schooner was hove into
-the wind to weather the corner of a long shallow point of breakers,
-our moorings were let go, our sails sharply brailed up, and we had
-soon the satisfaction of finding that we rode easily to our anchor in
-about eight fathom water, with a great labyrinth of sand-banks and
-low ledges of rock around.
-
-All this appeared to us like a dream; ten minutes before we had been
-ploughing along the open ocean, not dreaming that there lay land
-within three hundred miles of us, now we were in the midst of an
-immense and unknown shoal, and a flaw of wind, or a shift in the set
-of the currents which must traverse its intricate channels, might
-fling us on a bank of sand or rock, on which we would leave the bones
-of ship and men.
-
-Of course, our first business was to make our moorings as secure as
-possible. The Mosquito men, who have keen eyes, both by night and
-day, pointed out a dark lump upon our starboard bow, which we soon
-made out to be a low lying rock, and accordingly manning our light
-boat, we speedily carried out a warp, which we made shift to secure
-round a jagged projection of the reef, all clustered over with
-oysters and sea-weed.
-
-Meantime, Captain Jem, with Bristol Tom, and myself, and sundry of
-the oldest mariners, retired into the great cabin to examine the
-maps and charts. We certainly did not know the exact position of the
-schooner, for in the hurry of yesterday’s chase, no observation
-had been taken, but this we knew that no shoal or island, indeed no
-soundings at all, were laid down in our charts, near which we could
-possibly be.
-
-‘No, comrades,’ quoth Captain Jem, ‘here be rocks and banks, shoals
-and sands, which no mariner hath up to this time reported; although,
-mayhap, many a brave seaman hath found his long home amongst them.’
-
-We looked long and earnestly to the east, before the blessed light
-came out upon the ocean. At length the dawn grew pale in the sky,
-then a red, warm glow brightened above the waves; the thin night
-mists rolled away; the sea-birds came shrieking and clanging from
-their nests and holes, and we, truly, saw a lonely and desolate
-sight. All around the schooner, for miles and miles, was a pale
-greenish sea, laced, as it were, with bars and streaks of surf, which
-spread around like open net-work, and dotted here and there with
-great smooth banks of bright sand, and low, long reefs like jagged
-walls, rising now and then into a higher point of precipitous rock
-which showed, perhaps, some eight or ten feet above the level of the
-surf. The blue sea formed the framing of this dismal picture. As
-for the Spaniard he was nowhere to be seen, and, sooth to say, we
-thought or cared little about him. In regard to our own position,
-it was a miracle how we had by chance attained it; when I mounted
-the rigging and saw the great chaos of banks and spits of sand,
-and white belts of tumbling surf, through which we had reeled and
-staggered, as it were, blindfolded, without in the least knowing our
-course or the direction of the channels, I felt as if a miracle had
-been accomplished in our favour. Having got safely in, however, the
-question was now how to get safely out again, and so having called a
-council upon the deck, it was determined that the schooner should be
-made as snug as possible at her moorings, while the shallop, which
-was our smallest boat, went out to survey the shoal, and if possible
-hit upon a safe passage to the open sea.
-
-After breakfast, this plan was put into execution, and the charge of
-the boat was intrusted to me. The day was fine, the sea-breeze cooled
-the air. We put into the shallop some beef, biscuit, and a beaker
-of water, and rowed off in very tolerable spirits. Our first intent
-was to trace the route by which the schooner had arrived at her
-present anchorage; but the attempt soon bewildered us; one man was
-confident that we had passed to windward of this bank, while another
-maintained that we had run under its lee. Here was a reef which our
-bowman remembered to have observed perfectly well, while he who
-pulled at the stroke oar was equally confident that the schooner had
-never passed within a mile of it. We therefore gave up the idea of
-taking the ship out as we brought her in, and set to work to discover
-another passage into blue water. But sure such a hopeless range of
-shoals, banks, reefs, and dangerous points of rock, never bewildered
-poor mariners; sometimes we thought that we had hit upon a channel,
-but just as we were upon the point of finding our way clearly into
-the open ocean, a few specks of white water only seen when the sea
-fell into a trough at that place, would stretch across the route, and
-reveal the fact, that a ledge of pointed and pinnacled reef barred
-the way. Then the currents and sets of the tide puzzled us greatly,
-washing up one channel and down another, and boiling round the rocks
-in such a puzzling whirl of eddies and counter-eddies, that our boat
-was nigh stove more than once upon the sharp coral reefs. At length,
-after pulling the best part of the day, and landing upon many of the
-rocky plots, we made our way, with weary muscles and aching hearts,
-to the schooner, to report our ill success. We found that they had
-moored the vessel very snugly—that in case of accidents they had got
-the launch into the water, and that she lay in a snug little sandy
-cove, well sheltered from the swell, and, at half ebb, locked up, as
-it were, in a clear pool, like a shallow caldron.
-
-The afternoon passed away very dully. Captain Jem sent the small
-boat out again, with a fresh crew, to look for turtle and sea-birds;
-and it was determined that, next day, both the boats should start
-upon an exploring expedition. The turtling party soon returned with
-half-a-dozen fine turtles, and a great quantity of oysters; they had
-shot several ducks, but the greater quantity of birds they saw were
-noddies and sea-gulls, which they did not care to disturb.
-
-About an hour before sunset, the men were lounging under the
-awning which we had set, fore and aft, some of them fishing in the
-clear water beneath us, when, on a sudden, there was a great cry
-of astonishment raised; and looking up from the chart which I was
-studying, I saw a strange little man, so small, he might almost be
-called a dwarf, deliberately climbing over the taffrail. A dozen
-of our seamen rushed to lay hold of him, but he waved his hand, as
-though there was no necessity for violence, and jumped lightly down
-on deck.
-
-‘Where is the captain of this ship?’ quoth he, in a strange
-shrill cracked voice, and speaking English with a slight foreign
-accent. At this moment, Captain Jem came out of the main cabin and
-stared heartily, as indeed we all did, to see so unexpected and
-strange-looking a visitor. The creature—who was so queer and dwarfish
-a man, that, as I gazed upon him, I thought of old-world stories
-of Brownies and uncanny men of the moors—could not have been above
-four feet high. He had very broad shoulders, and such long muscular
-arms, that they looked like fore legs of an ape. His face was big and
-broad, but not by any means ugly. He had light blue twinkling eyes
-and long fair hair, and a beard of a flaxen colour. The little man’s
-dress was as strange as himself. He wore a broad hat, made of great
-ribbons of strong green sea-weed, very neatly plaited and wrought. He
-had a linen shirt, not of the cleanest, with a cloth cloak hanging
-round his loins, and bound with a broad belt of similar sea-weed to
-that which formed his hat, while on his legs, which were very short
-and thick, he wore a pair of coarse canvas drawers. His great brown
-splay feet were bare. When I say that this strange-looking apparition
-had a sort of necklace of coral, mixed with small pieces of gold and
-silver money hung round his neck; that his ears were weighed down
-with big silver rings; and that in his hand he carried a paddle, with
-a broad blade at each end, I have fully described to the reader the
-stranger who now advanced towards Captain Jem, pulling off his hat,
-and making a very polite bow. Not to be behindhand in good breeding,
-Stout Jem was nothing loth to return the salaam; after which, he
-asked the little man how the devil he had come on board.
-
-‘Look over the side and you will see,’ quoth the dwarf. We all
-rushed to the bulwark, and there sure enough was a light canoe most
-beautifully constructed, floating, as it appeared, on the very top of
-the water.
-
-‘Well, sir,’ quoth Captain Jem, ‘you seem a countryman of the most of
-us here, and you are very welcome. I can’t help, however, thinking
-that you must have dropped from the moon. Mayhap you are the man in
-it.’
-
-The dwarf waved his hand very impatiently, as who should say, a truce
-with your idle jeers, and then quoth he very solemnly—‘I am a pilot.’
-
-At this we all listened greedily enough.
-
-‘Well,’ says Captain Jem, ‘I can’t say that we are not in want of
-one. But whereabouts may we be? Is there land nigh; and what do you
-call these rocks and sands?’
-
-‘There is no land that I know of nigher than New Providence,’
-answered the dwarf, ‘and it lies a good hundred leagues to the
-westward and southward; and as for these rocks and sands, I cannot
-tell you their name, because they have got none.’
-
-‘Then what ships come hither that you act as pilot for?’ asked I.
-
-‘None at all,’ replied the little man, very briskly. ‘There is
-nothing to take ships hither, unless it be a few turtle, and these
-they can get in far less dangerous places.’
-
-At this we all stared at each other, and the men murmured that the
-dwarf was mad; and Bristol Tom whispered that mayhap the creature
-had been marooned—that is, deserted—upon these rocks, and that he
-had lost his reason. After a short pause, however, the dwarf-pilot
-resumed his discourse.
-
-‘There never was a ship,’ quoth he, ‘which came to these shoals but
-stayed there. There be plenty of room for a navy to lie on these
-sands and reefs, and then the first gale of wind that comes, smashes
-them faster than e’er a ship-breaker in Limehouse.’
-
-Captain Jem now began to lose patience, so he cried very wrathfully.
-
-‘If you talk more riddles to us, little man, God smite me! but I will
-run you up to the yard-arm by the breech of your galligaskins, and so
-dip you into the brine, as men serve a mangy monkey!’
-
-‘Nay,’ answered the dwarf, ‘I came on board to help you out of a
-scrape. You are discourteous, so get you to sea as you best can.’
-
-‘Well, well!’ replied Captain Jem, ‘I was in the wrong; but tell us
-frankly, man, what you are, and how you come to live amongst these
-accursed shoals?’
-
-‘What I will do for you is this,’ quoth the dwarf—‘and I will do
-neither more nor less; I will pilot your ship out to sea, and I will
-ask nothing for it, but that you make me rid of you without loss of
-time.’
-
-‘Why,’ quoth I, ‘you must be very fond of solitude to propose
-anything of the sort; and if you obstinately refuse to tell us what
-you are, or what you do here, how can we trust the ship and all our
-lives to your management?’
-
-‘You will have me on board,’ said the dwarf, ‘and I give you free
-leave to hang me up by the neck, not by the breech, if I as much as
-scrape a barnacle from the bottom of the schooner.
-
-This proposition certainly looked reasonable.
-
-‘What will you do, when we get to sea?’ asked Bristol Tom.
-
-‘What is that to you, old man?’ quoth the dwarf; ‘go your ways, and
-leave me to go mine. I warrant I should have had more wit than to
-come blundering in here against my will.’
-
-‘So you landed here on purpose?’ says I.
-
-‘Whether I did or no,’ says the dwarf, ‘is nothing to you. Do you
-want a pilot, or do you not?’
-
-Here, Captain Jem whispered to me that there might be more in this
-scene than met the eye, and that we should do well to secure the
-strange pilot who crowed so smugly. I assenting, the captain tipped
-the wink to half a dozen of the crew, who thereupon advanced towards
-the little man. But he was sharper than we, for, observing what we
-intended, he made but two jumps, one upon the bulwark, and the other
-into the canoe below, the bottom of which I thought would be driven
-out by his weight; but not a bit of it—the little bark-built skiff
-gave a great surge, and then floated tranquilly a couple of fathoms
-from the side.
-
-‘Call you that seamen’s hospitality?’ says the little man, grinning.
-
-Captain Jem flew into a great rage. ‘Get your muskets, men,’ he
-cried; but directly after, controlling himself, he directed us
-to give chase in the shallop, and bring back the pilot by force.
-Anticipating this order, I leaped into the boat, and calling out for
-four young men, who were the best rowers and the most muscular and
-long-winded fellows in the schooner, they jumped into the shallop
-with great glee, just as the dwarf, thinking he might as well have a
-start, dipped his paddle into the water and glided away. We were soon
-in chase, straining at the oars with right good will, and sending
-the shallop dancing at a great rate through the sea. Meantime our
-shipmates on board the schooner mounted into the rigging that they
-might observe the race the better, and encouraged us with abundance
-of cheers and exhortations not to spare our muscles. We brought the
-boat gradually to its full speed, the canoe being then only a dozen
-or so fathoms a-head. The dwarf was kneeling in the bottom of his
-craft, striking the water alternately on either side with the broad
-double blades of his paddle. Of course he had his back towards us,
-but he went, as the Spaniards phrase it, ‘with his beard upon his
-shoulder,’ that is to say, constantly looking back, with a provoking
-grin upon his face. We soon found that if we caught the gentleman at
-all, it would not be until after a hot chase and a long one. But we
-gave a shout and buckled to our work in good earnest. Meantime, the
-dwarf seemed to keep ahead almost without an effort—his light vessel
-skimming the very surface, while our heavier shallop was driving
-the sea into tiny ridges of foam, and leaving a wake of dancing
-agitated water. So, encouraging my men to pull long and strong, and
-steady strokes, we flew at a great rate through the intricacies of
-the shoal, speedily leaving the schooner far behind. It must have
-been a brave sight for a spectator to see—the light canoe, with its
-strange rower, spinning along, followed through all its windings and
-doublings by the shallop, impelled by cracking oars and straining
-muscles. Now and then we would cross bays and creeks only partially
-sheltered from the swing of the sea, the canoe jumping as it were,
-over the broken and sweltering waves, like a cork upon the parchment
-of a beaten drum, while the shallop would plunge, and jerk, and
-thrash, amid the cross surges, taking them on board over the larboard
-and starboard gunwales at once. Still, I think we would have caught
-the dwarf, nervous as was his arm, and swift as was his boat, had it
-not been for the rapidity with which he could wheel her round and
-round, following the crooked channels, and threading the narrow and
-intricate passages of the shoal, while he managed all the time to
-keep the canoe at great speed. Of course our boat was not so handy.
-Our utmost endeavours would not always suffice to keep her clear of a
-spit of sand, or to alter her course in time to avail ourselves of a
-shortcut into which the canoe would suddenly diverge. At length, my
-men began to show symptoms of distress; they panted at their toil,
-and, looking over their shoulders, began to murmur that there was
-no use in chasing the devil. All this while, the pilot had never
-ceased his impudent grin, and he seemed to be as fresh as when he had
-started from the side of the schooner. At length, we found ourselves
-in a pretty long open passage, with impassable barriers of reefs on
-either hand. The canoe was not more than a few fathoms ahead, for as
-we had flagged in our efforts, so had the dwarf relaxed in his. I
-thought that now was the time for a grand push, and shouting to the
-men that the game was in our hands, the brave fellows made a great
-rally—the ashen staves of the oars cracked, the water buzzed and
-foamed, and in a moment the boats were not more than a few feet apart.
-
-‘Huzza, we have him now!’ I shouted.
-
-The men pulled like devils, the dwarf worked hard with his paddle;
-but nothing could keep before us in such a chaise—foot by foot, we
-overhauled the canoe.
-
-‘Three strokes more, comrades, and he is ours.’ The men shouted, but
-the breath had hardly left their lips when—crack!—the bows of the
-shallop went smash upon a submerged spit of sand. The men were flung
-higgledy-piggledy, head over heels, sprawling into the bottom of the
-boat, while a couple of oars snapped like pistol shots. We had run
-upon a bar which crossed the passage, some six inches under water.
-The canoe, thanks to her light draught, had floated over it unhurt,
-and was now lying a few yards a-head—the abominable little dwarf
-grinning more furiously than ever.
-
-‘If we had a musket in the boat, you should laugh on the wrong side
-of your mouth,’ I shouted, gathering myself up and wiping my nose,
-which was bleeding famously. One of our men caught up a broken shaft
-of oar and hurled it at the canoe. The little man, who was as quick
-as light in his movements, parried the missile with the broad blade
-of his paddle, and called out—
-
-‘Ho! ho! pretty fellows to think of taking a ship out to sea without
-a pilot, when they can’t row a boat without running their noses
-against a post.’
-
-The answer to this was a simultaneous salute from all the fragments
-of the broken oars, one of which, despite his adroitness, gave the
-little man a very tolerable thwack across the shoulders, upon which,
-not choosing to risk the consequences of another broadside, the
-dwarf called out—
-
-‘Good night; you had better pull to the schooner if you don’t want to
-sleep among the noddies and the boobies. Ho! ho!—good night.’
-
-He then coolly paddled off, whistling. To have attempted to
-follow him would be sheer nonsense. We had our wings, as it were,
-clipped, and if we could not catch the canoe with four fresh men
-and four oars, there was little chance of overhauling him with
-four wearied men and two oars, so we addressed ourselves to get
-back to the schooner. The chase had lasted nearly an hour, and
-upon looking around we saw the mast of the ‘Will o’ the Wisp’ at
-a distance which somewhat startled us. There was a flag flying at
-her main-topmast-head which we supposed was a signal of recall. We
-therefore began to retrace our course, manning the remaining oars
-double.
-
-‘I hope we may make the schooner, Will Thistle,’ said Edward
-Lanscriffe, one of the boat’s crew.
-
-‘So do I,’ said Paul Williamson, who tugged at the same oar with him;
-‘it would be ill sleeping among desert rocks and sands, and them
-haunted too.’
-
-‘Haunted?’ said I, ‘what do you mean? Haunted by whom?’
-
-‘By whom but the dwarf who paddled that canoe,’ answered the bowman,
-a sailor from Penzance.
-
-‘Why,’ quoth I, ‘do you think he is anything but a man like
-ourselves—only, perhaps, for the matter of that, a trifle shorter?’
-
-All the men shook their heads gloomily, and one of them replied—
-
-‘No, no; it is no mortal that lives alone amongst these reefs, and
-refused the help of Christian men to carry him away from the middle
-of the sea.’
-
-‘That is over true,’ quoth Paul Williamson, ‘and greatly do I fear
-that his coming boded no good to ship or crew. He ought not to have
-been allowed on board.’
-
-I tried to laugh at all this, but somehow I was startled and put
-out of spirits myself, not that I much heeded the fancies of the
-superstitious sailors, but the whole thing seemed to me so wild,
-and strange, and uncommon, that I mused and mused hardly knowing
-what to think of it. Meantime, we were making the best of our way to
-the ship; of course our progress was slow, for we had to fish out a
-channel amid the shoals, and the tide being then low, the task was
-the more difficult. The accursed dwarf seemed to have led us into
-the most puzzling nook of all the reefs. We rowed and poled, and
-sometimes waded, dragging the boat along slippery ledges of rock, or
-smooth banks of fine white sand; but the schooner was still separated
-from us by a good couple of miles of rock, and sand, and sea, when
-the sun went down, and in less than half an hour we were groping
-in the darkness. The ship then fired a gun, and hoisted a light to
-one of the mast-heads as a signal. The twinkle of this light was,
-however, so faint, that had we not observed the lantern run up, we
-might well have taken it for a star, and therefore I kept my eyes
-steadily fixed upon the tiny spark, intending not to let it get out
-of sight. Directing the men, therefore, how to row, and continually
-bumping against points of rock and sand, we jogged on until, just
-as we rounded a long belt of reef, along which we had been running,
-the rush of a current of the young flood tide, which had just began
-to set in, sheered the shallop’s bows violently round, bore us some
-yards away out of our course, and then tossing us into a sort of
-boiling caldron, or rather slight whirlpool, we were swung round and
-round until our heads were giddy, and every idea of our proper course
-gone. Pulling at last clear of this vortex, we tried to discover the
-signal-light from the schooner, but in vain. The sky was now gemmed
-with stars down to the very horizon, and we knew not where to look
-for the guiding ray. It was then that I recollected how easily I
-might have set the position of the schooner by the constellations,
-but I had not thought of doing so, and now it was too late. The men
-began to look startled, and one of them said, in a low voice—
-
-‘I told you so; no schooner for us to-night.’
-
-‘Why do they not continue firing guns?’ I muttered, impatiently.
-‘Come, boys, let us give them a cheer.’
-
-The night was calm, and I thought our voices might be heard on board
-the ship, so standing up, and putting our hands trumpet-fashion to
-our mouths, we gave a long shrill halloo, and then listened intently.
-For a moment we heard nothing but the surging of the currents as the
-tide came washing along the channels of the reef, and the low sound
-of the surf outside. But then was heard distinctly the answering
-halloo. We shouted again, and shoved off in the direction of the
-voice, making very good way, for we had struck a tolerably open
-channel, along which the tide was setting fast. Presently we heard
-the hail again much closer.
-
-‘Come, come,’ quoth I, ‘Paul Williamson, you will swing in your
-hammock to-night, for all that is come and gone.’
-
-‘Boat ahoy!’ said the voice a third time. ‘Sheer to port, and keep
-along that belt of surf on your starboard beam. Have you caught the
-dwarf?’
-
-‘No, confound him!’ I shouted; ‘and we thought we should never have
-got to the schooner again. Why did you not keep firing?’
-
-To this no answer was given, and Edward Lanscriffe asked, in a
-low tone, which of our comrades it was who had hailed. This was a
-puzzler. We none of us knew the voice.
-
-‘Will-o’-the-Wisp, ahoy!’ I shouted. ‘Halloo!’ was the reply. ‘Why
-the devil don’t you come aboard? Have you fallen asleep over your
-oars?’
-
-‘We can’t see,’ we replied, standing up, and peering into the
-darkness. ‘Show a light, man—show a light!’
-
-Immediately a lantern gleamed ahead of us. We pulled towards it. It
-shone from a dark object. I was in the act of telling the men to lay
-on their oars, when grit, grit, grit! the boat’s keel scrunched upon
-the sand, and at the same time the lantern was extinguished.
-
-‘Ho! ho! Do you want a pilot? I think you do, indeed,’ exclaimed the
-shrill, cracked voice we knew so well.
-
-‘The dwarf, by God!’ ejaculated Paul Williamson. ‘I told you so. It
-is a demon, and we are bewitched.’
-
-I was in a great rage. ‘You skulking vagabond,’ I shouted out, ‘wait
-till daylight to-morrow, and we’ll see whether an ounce of lead won’t
-catch that canoe of yours, quick as it is.’
-
-To this there was no answer made, although we sat listening for near
-ten minutes. What was to be done? We hardly knew; but anything was
-better than lying idly where we were. The night breeze now struck
-cold and chill; the men had been overheated at their oars, and
-their teeth began to chatter. There was a very cordial response of
-‘Amen,’ therefore, as I said, ‘I wish we had put a bottle of brandy
-into the boat.’ For half an hour or so we pulled at random, the men
-whispering and muttering to each other, when I saw a faint flash in
-the distance, and presently heard the report of a gun. ‘There goes
-the schooner, at length,’ I cried. The boat’s head was promptly put
-into the proper direction, and we recommenced our weary pull with
-something like energy. We must have been near the outward edge of the
-shoals, for the surf thundered loud, and great broken swells often
-came rolling past us in a multitude of uneven undulations. All at
-once the confounded voice of the dwarf hailed us.
-
-‘You are going the wrong way, my brave fellows. If you expect to
-reach the schooner on that course, you must pull the boat round the
-world, and carry her over Asia.’
-
-‘Never mind the spiteful creature,’ I said, in a low tone; ‘he is but
-attempting to mislead us. It is his turn to-night; it will be ours
-to-morrow, when the sun rises.’
-
-Ten minutes more elapsed, then another musket was discharged, almost
-due ahead. ‘See,’ I exclaimed, in great triumph; ‘we are keeping the
-exact course; we shall be on board in a jiffey.’
-
-Paul Williamson shook his head. ‘The schooner,’ quoth he, ‘is
-anchored near the centre of the shoals, and you hear how heavy and
-how near the surf is beating.’
-
-I was somewhat troubled at this, I confess, but I saw nothing for it
-but to pull on. So we did, until having coasted for some time along
-a succession of rocks, on the opposite side of which the sea was
-running heavily, we suddenly shot out from beyond their shelter, and
-immediately the boat was hove up upon the crest of so high and long
-a swell, that we all exclaimed at once, that we were out in the open
-sea. Just then, the pernicious dwarf hailed again, his voice now
-seeming to come from astern.
-
-‘You are better pilots than I reckoned,’ shouted the spiteful atomy,
-‘only that when you would keep at sea you come ashore; and when you
-would hug the land you start off right into the ocean.’
-
-This time, at all events, he was clearly not deceiving us, so we
-promptly pulled the boat about, and were soon in the comparatively
-smooth water of the reef. One thing we now knew pretty well—the dwarf
-was armed, for it must have been he who fired the muskets, and,
-not doubting but that his optics were far more accustomed to the
-darkness than ours, we thought it extremely probable that he might
-amuse himself by plumping a shot or two into the boat. This was not a
-comfortable idea to cherish, so I hailed at random—
-
-‘Pilot! pilot—ahoy!’ no answer. We repeated the summons a dozen of
-times, but heard no sound save the heavy beat of the surf and the
-wild cry of sea-birds.
-
-‘Why, the scoundrel has gone home to bed,’ quoth I; ‘and, to tell you
-the truth, comrades, I think we may give up playing at blind man’s
-buff for the night, and wait peaceably until we see the schooner in
-the morning.’
-
-This counsel was followed. We presently found a sandy cove, in which
-we lay very snugly, and then, after setting a watch, dropped off to
-sleep, weary, hungry, thirsty, and vexed.
-
-The day dawned, and we speedily discovered the schooner, about as far
-off as she was when we lost sight of her after sundown, the evening
-before. A pull of an hour brought us alongside, upon which there was
-a great outcry to know whether we had caught the pilot, and why we
-had not returned betimes.
-
-‘Why,’ quoth I, ‘we could not see you in the dark.’
-
-‘There was a light all night at the main-topmast-head,’ says Captain
-Jem.
-
-‘Yes, but we lost sight of it once, and then we could not tell your
-lantern from a star. Why did you not fire?’
-
-‘We were clearing away the bow gun,’ answered Captain Jem, ‘when we
-heard you fire a musket.’
-
-‘We fire! that was the dwarf. We had no musket.’
-
-‘By the Lord!’ says Captain Jem, ‘I think we are all bewitched among
-these cursed reefs, which no one ever saw or heard of before.’
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XV.
-
-AT LENGTH THEY CATCH THE DWARF PILOT, AND HEAR STRANGE THINGS
-TOUCHING A TREASURE.
-
-
-Preparations were now again made in order to discover a way out. My
-comrades would have me turn in and go to sleep, but I was too much
-excited to hear of it; and, accordingly, after breakfast I was in
-the shallop again, with four fresh men, including Nicky Hamstring
-and Bristol Tom. We carried with us fragments of light wood and
-great stones for sinkers, to buoy a passage for the schooner. There
-was no need of lead or line, for we could see to the bottom of the
-crystal water, even where it was many fathoms deep. We were thus
-engaged great part of the day, and being now working with something
-like method and regularity, we were making sensible progress in
-discovering a channel, when, just as I was setting one of our buoys,
-Nicky Hamstring grasped my arm, and whispered with a sort of gasp,
-‘There—look there!’
-
-I followed his eye, and started up with delight. A long bank of sand,
-with ridges of coral, along which we had been skirting for some
-time, terminated in one of the largest and highest rocks we had seen.
-Indeed, when the tide was out, it seemed rather a rocky islet than a
-rock; but what directed our attention to it was a deep cleft, into
-which the sea ran, and in which, as in a cistern of water, floated
-the bark canoe of the dwarf pilot. The shallop was close alongside
-the sand-bank when we made this discovery, and Nicky and I leaped out
-of her into the shallow water like a couple of madmen, and screaming
-to our comrades to row for the little creek, we both scampered along
-the dry hard sand towards the rock.
-
-‘You secure the canoe,’ I called to Nicky; ‘the owner is not far from
-the nest; so, while Nicky went clambering along the steep shelves
-to the cove, I climbed up the ledges of the rock, slipping down now
-and then into cracks and hollows, which peeled my shins famously,
-but very soon arriving at the summit, from which I caught sight of
-the dwarf running with great speed round the base of the rock, and
-immediately gave chase, shouting out to our friend to surrender at
-discretion. But he took no notice, making as straight as he could
-for the cove, whence, doubtless, he expected to get clear off in his
-canoe. I seeing this, thought it unnecessary to risk my neck in order
-to intercept him, and so clambered leisurely down the rock laughing
-aloud, and calling to the dwarf that I had told him that our turn
-would come with daylight. Meantime, the little man went skipping over
-the rocks like a goat, never making a false step, until suddenly he
-came in sight of the cove, within which the shallop by this time lay
-alongside the canoe. Then he sent up a shrill cry of surprise, which
-my comrades answered with a cheer, and stopping short, appeared to
-pause for a moment, after which he made straight for a projecting
-shoulder of the rock, round which he speedily disappeared.
-
-‘Never mind,’ quoth I; ‘take care of the canoe, and we shall soon
-find him.’ So saying, I called upon Nicky and Bristol Tom to land,
-which they did, making their way to the projection, round which the
-dwarf had run, while I, following a steep cleft or split in the rock,
-which ran from near the top of it, down to a white sandy beach on the
-opposite side from the cove, descended rapidly. All at once, about
-half-way down, my eye caught the flutter of canvas, and immediately
-I discerned something like a tent, very snugly pitched in a nook of
-rock, about a couple of fathoms above high water-mark, with a sort of
-fence of barrels and boxes round it.
-
-‘Ho, ho!’ quoth I. ‘Here is the hermitage, at last.’
-
-‘Stop!’ says the shrill voice I had so often heard, ‘stop there—as
-you value your life!’
-
-And thereon I descried the dwarf, with a long-barrelled Spanish gun
-in his hand, which he was in the act of lifting to his shoulder.
-
-‘Stop!’ quoth he again; and being unarmed, I had nothing for it, in
-prudence, but to obey.
-
-‘My friend,’ says I, ‘you may as well uncock that gun. Your canoe is
-taken, as you saw. My comrades are upon the rock. The schooner is not
-a mile off, and if you are fool enough to fire at me, hit or miss, I
-warn you that it will be the last time you will ever pull a trigger.’
-
-The little man paused a moment. ‘Let me alone, and I will let you
-alone,’ he said.
-
-‘No, no,’ quoth I. ‘You paid us the first visit, and we must show our
-good breeding by returning it.’
-
-The pilot considered for a brief space, made a passionate gesture
-with the air of a man deeply mortified, and then called out, at the
-same time grounding his musket—
-
-‘Come on. I will do you no harm.’
-
-So I descended and joined him, just as Nicky and Bristol Tom made
-their appearance on the beach below, having run round the islet. By
-this time we were close to the tent.
-
-‘Come in,’ says the dwarf; ‘I shall be more hospitable than you.’ The
-habitation consisted simply of a dry cleft in the rocks, over which
-a roof of canvas had been stretched, supported in the centre by a
-pole. For furniture there was a hammock, not slung, but laid upon
-the sandy floor, and a sea-chest, upon which lay a very complete
-set of astronomical instruments, with paper, pens, and ink, and a
-half-finished chart, which, appearing to be a plan of the shoals,
-I laid violent hands on at once. There was some common household
-stuff, such as knives, plates, and pots in a corner, and near them a
-good-sized water barrel.
-
-‘Well, gentlemen,’ says the dwarf, very politely, ‘behold you in my
-dwelling. What may be your pleasure?’
-
-‘Our pleasure,’ said I, ‘is that you shift your dwelling for a brief
-space, and sling your hammock on board the schooner.’
-
-‘I protest against being thus unlawfully carried away,’ says the
-little man.
-
-‘You are at perfect liberty to protest,’ said I; ‘but you must go on
-board all the same.’
-
-The pilot gave a curious sort of grin, but did not seem disposed
-to resist our power. Nicky Hamstring then went to the top of the
-rock, and hailed our comrades to bring the canoe and the shallop
-round, which presently they did. Meantime I was considering within
-myself, whether by a careful overhaul of the little man’s dwelling,
-I might not be able to light on some clue to the motive—and it could
-not be a common one—which seemed to bind him to these desolate
-shoals. Resolving to take my own time and my own way in the search,
-I directed my comrades to put the pilot into the shallop and row
-aboard of the schooner, telling Captain Jem that I would follow in
-the canoe, after a careful search of the tent. They started off
-accordingly; the dwarf, who appeared to be in tolerable good humour,
-notwithstanding his capture, taking my place in the stern-sheets, and
-managing the tiller.
-
-As soon as they had disappeared, I commenced my inquisition. The
-chart of the shoals was very skilfully constructed, and neatly put
-upon paper, being very different, indeed, from the rude scrawls
-which seamen commonly trace, of coasts and islands. No indication,
-however, was to be observed of any harbour, or secure cove, the
-existence of which might make the reefs a place of refuge. I noticed,
-however, on the north-west corner of the shoals, a cross slightly
-traced with a pencil. Putting the chart in my pocket, I searched
-the hut thoroughly, raking up the sand which formed the floor; and
-also prying into the casks and boxes which surrounded the tent.
-These appeared to contain nothing save common coarse provisions.
-The contents of the sea-chest were clothes such as sailors wear,
-with one suit of a Spanish cut and fashion, in a pocket of which
-I felt something hard. Examining more closely, I found the object
-to be a small and old book, in the Spanish language, imprinted at
-Granada, in the year 1507, and purporting to be the ‘Voyages and
-Perilous Journeyings of one Vincente y Tormes, who sailed on board
-the Caravel, called the Pinta, with the great Admiral Christopher
-Colon, or Columbus, for the Discovery of the New World.’ Looking over
-the contents of this volume, I found them to be accounts of divers
-voyages made between Spain and the West Indies, written in very
-bad and cramped Spanish, and containing but dry details of little
-interest.
-
-I was about to lay the volume down, when I noticed that it came very
-easily open towards the latter portion, as though that part had been
-peculiarly studied, and looking more closely, I saw that a leaf had
-been cut out. Towards the foot of the page preceding that which was
-missing, was a chapter with a title as follows—
-
- HEREIN I DISCOURSE OF THE PERILOUS LOSS OF THE GREAT TREASURE
- SHIP SANTA FÈ, AND OF MY MIRACULOUS ESCAPE, BEING THE ONLY ONE OF
- THAT SHIP’S COMPANY WHO, THROUGH THE SPECIAL GRACE OF THE BLESSED
- VIRGIN, WAS PRESERVED OUT OF A GREAT DANGER.
-
-Then followed the words of the narrative in this wise:—
-
-‘Now all things being in readiness, there was a great mass held, with
-other needful ordinances and prayers to the saints; and so, on the
-14th of June, we loosed from the city of Porto Bello, intending to
-touch at St. Domingo, in the great Isle of Hispaniola, to receive
-the tribute from the caciques, and so thence across the ocean to
-Spain. But, alas, it fell out otherwise!—for being but six days at
-sea, with contrary winds, which here do blow continually from the
-north-west point of the compass, we did unhappily——’
-
-This was the last line of the page; the following leaf being, as I
-have said, torn out. The narrative recommenced upon the succeding
-page with these words:—
-
-‘Thus—thus was I—all praise to the holy saints, particularly to my
-patron St. Geneviève, and to the Virgin—rescued from my hopeless and
-miserable condition, and carried home to Spain, I being very heavy
-and desponding in that voyage, on account of the loss of all my
-shipmates, so that I vowed never to tempt the seas again, but rather
-to live on crusts and water ashore.’
-
-From the remaining chapters, which were few, it would seem that the
-author had kept to this resolution, for he narrated that he became a
-water-carrier and a servant to a priest, called Pedro Vronez, to whom
-he dictated the book. The perusal of what I have set down above, the
-reader will possibly guess, gave rise to a startling train of ideas
-in my mind, and putting the adventures of Vincente y Tormes in my
-pocket, I jumped into the canoe, the Mosquito-men having taught me
-the management of such cockle-shells, and was presently alongside the
-schooner.
-
-Captain Jem was leaning over the side, fishing with a hook and line.
-
-‘Well, what have you found?’ quoth he, as if he did not think that my
-search could have availed much.
-
-‘Pound!’ I echoed, clambering on board. ‘I have found what may well
-make our fortunes.’
-
-At these words, our comrades came running from all sides very eagerly.
-
-‘Where is the dwarf?’ quoth I.
-
-‘Oh, in the great cabin,’ replied the captain. ‘A sullen piece of
-goods, I warrant you. He refuses to speak a word.’
-
-‘Have him out,’ answered I; ‘and we will try to make him find his
-tongue.’
-
-And so, presently, Master Pilot was hustled forth upon the deck.
-
-‘Will you tell us,’ quoth I, ‘why you choose to live alone amongst
-these grim rocks?’
-
-The little man grinned, twisted his features, and answered never a
-word. The crew looked on curiously.
-
-‘Once upon a time, there sailed a Spanish treasure-ship from Porto
-Bello.’
-
-The dwarf pricked up his ears, and all the blood went away from his
-face.
-
-‘In which ship,’ I continued, ‘there was a mariner named Vincente
-y Tormes. But the ship had not been six days at sea, going to
-Hispaniola to receive the tribute of the Caciques, when it was lost
-upon certain reefs, _with the treasure on board_, and Vincente
-y Tormes of all the crew was saved, and carried to Spain, where
-afterwards he became a water-carrier and servant to a priest, named——’
-
-‘You need not trouble yourself to recite further,’ said the dwarf,
-with a shrug of the shoulders. ‘You guess my secret. I thought none
-of you had wit enough to pick the marrow out of that bone, but it
-was all my own fault. I came on board this schooner, and in doing so
-threw away, by one moment of folly, the fruits of years of labour
-and danger. Dolt that I was!—what could it matter to me whether you
-succeeded in blundering out, as you blundered in, or stayed here
-until the first heavy blow smashed your ship to powder on these coral
-reefs? It would have been all the same to me.’
-
-Having made this speech with great bitterness, but in a perfectly
-composed fashion, the dwarf sat down upon a coil of rope, and
-shrugged his shoulders almost as high as the crown of his head.
-
-The crew were now all in a hubbub, for they comprehended, more or
-leas, that there was the wreck of an ancient galleon upon the reef,
-and they knew that silver and gold are metals which brine rusts not.
-
-‘I suppose,’ quoth the dwarf, ‘that you will give me a fair share of
-the booty when we get it?’
-
-This they all proclaimed that they were very ready to do, and one or
-two of the more eager shook hands with the dwarf, who assumed a very
-sour smile.
-
-‘Now, then,’ quoth the captain, when the tumult was a little abated,
-‘tell us somewhat more about this, and rely upon it we will deal
-justly by you. Who and what are you?’
-
-‘Why,’ quoth the dwarf, ‘my story is of the shortest; my name is
-Paul Bedloe, and I was born beneath the Peel of Douglas, in the Isle
-of Man; my father owning a small craft, which plied to Liverpool—a
-village on the Lancaster coast—I was brought up a sailor, but I liked
-better to write and cipher than to handle ropes and furl sails; and
-having, also, a great liking for geography and astronomy, I became a
-very good navigator, and going to London, settled at Limehouse, where
-I kept a school for teaching seamen the art of navigation. Growing
-somewhat tired of this business, however, I went several voyages to
-these seas with a captain who had been my scholar; and afterwards,
-returning to Europe, I wandered through many countries, taking great
-delight in Spain, where I found several interesting accounts left by
-the first discoverers of America of their voyages. One day, in the
-shop of a Jew in Cadiz, I discovered the book which you, sir’—turning
-to me—‘doubtless, found in my chest. One leaf of that work had a very
-particular interest for me, and from the time I first saw it, I have
-kept it carefully on my person.’
-
-With that the Manxman produced the missing page from his bosom.
-
-‘By the help of this,’ continued he, ‘I found out how the
-treasure-ship, Santa Fè, had been stranded upon an exceeding great
-shoal, and how a storm soon coming on, she had sunk in middling deep
-water, between two ledges of rock. The ship’s company having deserted
-her in boats, these were speedily swallowed up in the storm, save
-that one in which Vincente y Tormes sailed, and which survived the
-tempest, although it was driven far to leeward. The wind then taking
-off, a calm followed, during which all the seamen in the boat, with
-only the exception of Vincente y Tormes, perished miserably of hunger
-and thirst. He was himself nigh dead, when a caravel descried and
-picked him up; ultimately conveying him to Spain, where he settled,
-and went no more to sea. You may judge,’ continued Paul Bedloe,
-‘whether I have not given a fair account of the missing page;’ and,
-handing the document to me, he continued as follows:—
-
-‘On reading what I have now stated to you, it occurred to me that,
-in all the maps and charts which I had seen, no mention had ever
-been made of any such shoals as that upon which the “Santa Fè” was
-wrecked, and I concluded that no ship had ever fallen in with them,
-save those which, like the Porto Bello galleon, had never returned
-to tell the tale. Hence, I concluded, that it was very possible that
-some fragments of the wreck might yet remain undisturbed, containing
-boundless wealth. With much ado, and by spending nearly all which I
-possessed in bribes, I got access to the documents in the archives
-of the Minister of Marine of Spain, and there I found the loss of
-the “Santa Fè” fully confirmed. She had sailed from Porto Bello,
-and had never been heard of again. This entry, mark you, was before
-the date of Vincente’s publication, while he, not having appeared
-to contemplate the possibility of recovering the foundered wealth,
-took no steps, and communicated with no one on the subject. After
-this, I carefully examined Vincente’s narrative, and compared with
-it the records of many voyages from Porto Bello and Carthagena to
-Hispaniola and Porto Rico, so that, at length, I satisfied myself
-that the shoals in question must, if they existed at all, be within a
-circle of fifty miles in diameter. I next communicated with a brother
-of mine in Bristol, touching the matter, and informing him that I
-intended to proceed to the West Indies in search of the shoals, and
-the wreck of the “Santa Fè,” conjured him, in case he heard from me
-again, to have a ship ready fitted out, to sail for the longitude
-and latitude which I would send him. I embarked at Cadiz, and landed
-in Porto Rico, which island I suspected of being almost right to
-windward of the shoals. Here I made acquaintance with a Welsh seaman,
-to whom I partly communicated my projects; and with the help of a
-negro and two Indians, very faithful attached fellows, we constructed
-a great “Piragua,” victualled her very well, and put off to sea. We
-cruised for a month with no success, and then were forced to run
-for the Samballas Islands, off Darien, for more provisions. Putting
-to sea again, after a three weeks’ voyage, we hit upon the spot we
-sought for. The weather was then exceeding calm, and we could see
-the bottom in the very deepest parts of the reef, so that on the
-eighth day of our search, we actually descried the remains of a great
-ship, wedged between two rocks, about five fathoms under water. Our
-Indians were brave divers, and speedily brought up pieces of carved
-wood, and two or three old-fashioned swords, which satisfied me that
-we had hit upon the wreck of an ancient Spanish vessel; for when
-we scoured the blades, we could read on them the word “Bilboa.” At
-length, after tearing a great deal of the wreck to pieces, the divers
-reported that they had come to many large chests, with great clamps
-of rusted iron; and one of these being wrenched open, a small ingot
-was seen lying just beneath the lid, which we soon found to be virgin
-silver. On this, I stopped further proceedings, and wrote a letter
-to my brother in cipher, such as we had agreed upon to use. This
-letter, my comrades in the “Piragua” started away with, designing to
-make Jamaica, and send it home by an English ship; while I, having
-an ample amount of provisions, and having found great basins in the
-rocks, which the rain filled with fresh water, determined to remain,
-until the “Piragua” returned from Jamaica, to watch over my treasure,
-and to study the best means of recovering it. In case of accident to
-the “Piragua,” I had a canoe, with which, in moderate weather, I was
-not afraid of reaching the land. I had been here just two months and
-three days, when, on waking one morning, I saw your schooner. Such,
-gentlemen, is my story from first to last.’
-
-You may be sure that there was great acclamation at these tidings
-of a ship-load of riches falling, as it were, into our mouths; but
-Captain Jem, who appeared to have his doubts of Mr. Bedloe, ordered
-his person, his chest, and hammock to be very strictly searched.
-Everything found, however, confirmed the story. There were several
-books upon navigation, and an old diary in which were entered divers
-sums in dollars, reals, and maravedis, which appeared to have been
-expended upon the Spanish officials at the office of marine. Besides
-this, the draught of a letter, addressed to Master Richard Bedloe,
-near the church of St. Mary, Redcliffe, in Bristol, corroborated a
-great portion of the dwarf-pilot’s story; so that, upon the whole, we
-began to believe him firmly. The ingot, he told us, the Welshman had
-taken to Jamaica to be assayed.
-
-By the time that all these particulars had been ascertained, the
-day was almost at an end, and it was determined that, with the dawn
-next morning, both the boats should start to the wreck, provided
-with due tackle, and having the Indians, who are excellent divers,
-aboard. Paul Bedloe’s hammock was swung in the great cabin, and a
-watch placed over him all night: but he appeared to sleep soundly,
-and to be but little affected by the probable downfall of his golden
-hopes. Indeed, so much was I struck with this, and so composed was
-the dwarf in confessing the whole matter to us, part of which must at
-all events be true, that I came to the conclusion that, despite of
-all his pretended candour and frankness, the fellow intended to play
-us a slippery trick after all; so that, confiding my suspicions to
-my comrades, Mr. Bedloe was informed that, five minutes after he had
-given any symptom of treachery, he would be dangling from the sprit
-of the mainsail. To this intimation, the only answer he vouchsafed
-was the old shrug of the shoulders.
-
-The night seemed long to many on board, and with the grey dawn the
-boats were manned, Bedloe sitting beside the captain in the launch,
-and directing the steersman. The dwarf told us that he would take
-the boats to the place where the wreck lay, which was near the open
-sea, by such a channel as the schooner could follow in. We therefore
-laid down buoys as we went along, it being determined that as soon as
-the launch reached the wreck, I should pull back in the shallop, and
-navigate the ship to the scene of action.
-
-And now, behold us, with shout, and joke, and laugh, like men who
-are to be speedily and marvellously enriched, pulling gaily for the
-sunken El Dorado. The morning mist was rising slowly from the ocean;
-the surf-ridges sparkled in the first glances of the hot sunlight and
-the white and grey sea-birds wheeled and screamed joyously overhead.
-The very rocks and sands bore a changed aspect in our eyes; instead
-of forlorn and dreary shelves of crag and shingle lying desolately in
-a far-off sea, we gazed upon them as the mystic beds of incalculable
-wealth: ‘The sea,’ we said, joyfully, ‘may not give up her dead, but
-she keeps a feebler clutch upon her gold. Courage, comrades, courage!
-we shall divide the ingots which were melted for the treasury of Old
-Castile.’
-
-‘Why may there not be more than one single castaway ship lying
-hereabouts?’ quoth our surgeon. And we echoed, ‘Why indeed?’
-
-At this juncture I noticed Paul Bedloe start and turn pale, just
-as he did when I told him his secret the day before. He recovered
-himself, however, directly, and it was not until after events had
-made me connect that start with the topic of conversation at the
-moment, that I realized all its significance and meaning.
-
-A pull of less than an hour brought us to the spot where Bedloe
-declared that the treasure of the Santa Fè lay hid. The shoal, to
-the southward extremity, where we now anchored the boats, split into
-two long branches or arms, having deep and sheltered water between
-them. It was on the weathermost or eastern of these banks, among
-spits of sand and jags of rock, that the remains of the ill-fated
-ship lay. Making fast a grapnel to a point of coral, we allowed the
-boats, under the pilot’s direction, to drift five or six fathoms to
-leeward, until they floated in a rather deep channel, or hole, well
-sheltered by the coral reefs from the motion of the sea.
-
-‘Now then,’ quoth Bedloe, ‘look beneath you.’ Immediately, we were
-all bending over the gunwales of launch and shallop, and presently,
-shading off the light with one hand, we saw, some five fathoms down,
-wavering and quivering through the clear cold water, the mouldering
-form of a ship of size. There lay the once graceful hull, bulged
-and split by the rocks, the bows broken off altogether, the quarter
-and stern firmly jammed in a crevice of the reef, and so uninjured
-that we could distinguish the quarter galleries and the outlines
-of the sculptured figures and medallions and carving. The deck had
-been partially broken up, and two or three cannon lay half upon the
-bulwarks, half upon the rocks. All three masts had been broken off
-close by the board, and their stumps, like the rest of the wreck,
-were encrusted with masses of shell-fish, and heaped, here and there,
-with wavy bunches of slimy sea-weed. Fish of many sizes and forms
-glided tranquilly between us and the foundered ship, and once or
-twice we saw a great flat ray rise up from the dark recesses of the
-hold, and glide like a plate of burnished copper along the deck.
-
-‘There, gentlemen,’ says Paul Bedloe, ‘you see I have dealt fairly
-by you. You look upon the Santa Fè, which, more than one hundred and
-sixty years ago, set sail from Porto Bello for Old Spain.’
-
-So, rising up, we gave a great shout, which, in a minute, we
-heard echoed by our comrades, whom we had left behind in the
-Will-o’-the-Wisp.
-
-‘Will Thistle,’ says the captain, ‘bring up the schooner directly,
-and for heaven’s sake, take care of her bottom against the reefs; we
-may have a freight of price to carry home in it.’
-
-So presently, having returned to the Will-o’-the-Wisp, and satisfied
-the eager demands of those on board, we very soon cast off our
-moorings, and the trade wind blowing steadily, we set our forestay
-sail and mainsail and began to run down the channel towards the
-launch. The way being well buoyed, and all hands working very
-smartly, and keeping a bright look-out, there was no difficulty, and
-little danger in making the run, and in less than an hour from the
-time I had left the launch, the schooner glided into the fork of deep
-water between the two tails of the reef, and then forging near the
-edge of the weathermost bank we furled our canvas, and the anchor
-plunged down, twelve fathoms to the bottom, sinking well into the
-soft sand, which here formed good holding-ground.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVI.
-
-HOW THE DWARF TURNS TRAITOR, AND OF HIS FATE.
-
-
-The launch lay at about a cable’s length distance, and Captain Jem
-hailed me to shove off the shallop again, and bring a couple of
-hand-leads, and some strong lines for the use of the divers, with
-one block of the pig-iron which we had for ballast, and a good stout
-rope attached to it. As we pushed off with these articles on board,
-we saw the naked, dusky forms of both the Mosquito Indians, poising
-themselves with their clenched hands above their heads upon the
-gunwale of the launch, when, after swinging and swaying their bodies
-for a moment or two, they sprang into the air together, and dived
-head-foremost down. By this time, so great was the eagerness, that
-half of the men were stripped as well as the Indians, and no sooner
-had the latter disappeared, than near a dozen stalwart fellows leaped
-overboard and dived after them. But our countrymen were none of them
-skilful enough in the art to descend through five fathoms of water
-and yet keep their eyes keenly open and their wits well about them;
-and as the shallop rubbed sides with the launch, their black, sleek
-heads and red, strained faces, began to appear puffing and blowing,
-like so many grampuses, all round the boats, and crying out that the
-water was too deep for them. One man alone, a slender, muscular
-young fellow, a Frenchman, who had been used, when a boy, as he told
-us, to dive from a pier, at Brest, for sous, alone brought up in his
-clutch a mass of slushy sea-weed, grasped from the stump of one of
-the masts.
-
-The Indians were, however, yet under water, and we were getting
-uneasy about them, when we saw their dark forms shooting between us
-and the foundered ship, and presently they stuck their black heads,
-for all the world like seals, above the surface, holding up their
-empty hands in token of their fruitless plunge. They had descended
-through one of the hatchways into the hold, and groped about there as
-they best could in the dim light, but except sheets of rotten canvas
-and masses of rusted iron, they found nothing. Upon this, Bedloe was
-immediately appealed to, as to the position of the precious coffers,
-and he declared that they lay very deep indeed, almost at the keel of
-the vessel, in the stern, having probably been stowed under the great
-cabin. He had not been down himself, he said, as an asthma hindered
-him from diving, but both of his Indians had crept through the deck
-at the after hatchway, and he fully believed their report.
-
-We now prepared to institute a fuller search, and with that view,
-making fast the great block of ballast-iron to the rope, we hove it
-overboard. The ponderous lump of metal fell upon the high quarter
-deck, and crashed through the rotten wood, into the cabin beneath,
-starting whole shoals of flat-fish and eels, which glided and
-wriggled away, and sending up to the surface a boiling volume of
-thickened and turbid water, with little chips of wood, and ends of
-rope, which, thanks to pitch and tar, had remained unsaturated with
-moisture. We waited for a short time until the sea had cleared, and
-then Blue Peter and his comrades fastened the two hand-leads round
-their waists, leaving the other extremities of the lines attached
-to them in our hands, and then going gently over the side of the
-boat, grasped the downward leading rope and slid along it, just as
-though it had been a back-stay, until they disappeared beneath the
-shipwrecked vessel’s decks, we, of course letting out the lead-lines
-as the divers proceeded. A moment of great anxiety followed, and
-I observed that the dwarf instead of having his eyes fixed, like
-most of us, upon the water, was looking about him very nervously,
-fidgeting upon his seat, and moving and rubbing his fingers, and
-biting his lips, as people do who fear detection of misdeeds.
-Presently, the Indians again ascended to the surface, and again empty
-handed. There were nothing like chests or coffers they said—only
-casks, which being quite rotten, they had broken into and found them
-full of flour, hard caked with the wet. There were also some old
-fashioned carbines, a great grindstone, a quantity of rotten cables
-and hawsers, a small brass cannon, and a great unnameable mass of
-mouldering material, which stirred when it was trodden upon, and
-blackened the water, so that, after a few moments, the Indians could
-see no more.
-
-At this information, there were many threatening scowls cast upon the
-Manxman, but he bore them firmly enough.
-
-‘Well, Paul Bedloe,’ says the Captain, ‘what say you to this?’
-
-‘I presume your divers are not so expert as mine—that is what I say,’
-answered the little man, coolly enough.
-
-At this Blue Peter fired up.
-
-‘I say—dere are no coffers or treasure at all dere!’ exclaimed the
-Indian: ‘and Massa Captain Jem here believe Blue Peter, who never
-told him a lie—oh, never, not at all.’
-
-‘Yes, Blue Peter, I do believe you,’ replied Captain Jem; ‘and if
-the prisoner here be dealing falsely with us, on his own head be the
-peril.’
-
-This was the first time that the Captain had called Bedloe the
-‘prisoner,’ and the little man started at the phrase, very
-perceptibly, but he only said—
-
-‘I tell you what my Indians told me; and one of them brought up an
-ingot of silver to prove that his words were true.’
-
-I was, meanwhile, musing whether I should not try a dive myself. I
-remembered that I had been tolerably expert at the exercise, when a
-boy, and so, stripping and buckling a hand-lead to my loins, as I
-had seen the Indians do to aid their descent, I plunged overboard
-into the tepid sea, and grasping the rope, found that I descended
-rapidly and easily, and that the water was so transparent, that I
-saw above me the keels of the boats, and below me the form of the
-cast-away ship, as clearly as though I gazed upon them through the
-gloaming of a Scottish summer’s evening. It was a curious sensation,
-that of clinging to the rope in the mid sea, with the water like a
-mass of thick green air, wavering and gurgling about me, and the
-indistinctly-seen forms of fishes gliding hither and thither, like
-little opaque phantoms,—and as strange was the feeling when I placed
-my foot, as though my body had no weight, upon the slimy deck, and
-felt the feathery sea-weed rise upwards at the pressure, and cling
-and wave about my legs. All this, of course, passed in a moment, and
-in the next I had descended through the after-hatchway, and steadying
-myself with my feet upon the lump of pig-iron, I had time to cast
-a hurried, but observant glance around me. A considerable portion
-of the deck had been torn away, or broken up, by the fall of the
-pig-iron, and down the aperture came a dull greenish light, showing
-the dim outline of great ribs of wood, and masses of timber-work,
-bulged and broken, with fragments of the rock projecting, here and
-there, through the crushed and splintered masses. Around me lay
-piled up rotting casks, and the fragments of bulkheads, and the
-smouldering remains of furniture. I saw the holes where doors had led
-from cabin to cabin, sea-weed came waving through them. Shell-fish
-clung in clusters to what had been the rudder-case, and to rusty
-iron-work, which as I moved, upon the rotting wood and hemp, hurt my
-feet. Sprawling along the wreck, and rousing slimy fish from their
-lurking-places, I made my way to where I saw the sheen of glimmering
-metal, and presently I clutched what was the brass box of a compass.
-Then throwing off my leaden sinker, I burst my way out of a
-quarter-gallery window, and rose rapidly to the surface, almost spent
-for want of air,—holding the compass above my head. It was a minute
-after I had breathed, before the loud ringing in my ears enabled me
-to hear the shouts of my comrades. They had seen the glimmer of the
-metal as I rose, and very naturally took the brass for gold; but they
-were soon undeceived, and after I had been hauled on board, and had
-time to examine my prize, I undeceived them still further, for I saw
-a name and a date upon the implement.
-
-‘So, comrades,’ I exclaimed, ‘the little man is playing us false.
-The Santa Fè must have been lost before the year 1507, and upon this
-compass case is written, “Ericson. Amsterdam, 1645.”’
-
-At this, there was a loud shout of wrath, and the seamen turned in
-fury to the dwarf; but he preserved a wonderful boldness,—all the
-nervous agitation was gone, and though he was pale, neither hand nor
-lip quivered.
-
-‘This is not the wreck of the Santa Fè,’ thundered Captain Jem, ‘and
-we were dolts to take it for such. Timber must have mouldered away
-in half the time this vile dwarf would have us believe that the ship
-beneath us had lain under water. But take care,’ and the captain
-turned to Bedloe and shook him soundly,—‘take care how you trifle
-with us, or, as you seem so fond of this wreck, by God, you shall lay
-your stunted bones in it.’
-
-Paul Bedloe seemed prepared for this burst, for he said very
-calmly—‘I have told you what I know, and if you are deceived, it is
-because I was beguiled myself. The Indians spoke falsely.’
-
-‘And the ingot—the silver ingot!’ shouted half a dozen of the men.
-
-‘That I saw with my own eyes brought up from the water,’ replied
-Bedloe; ‘and he who recovered it said that there was much more where
-that came from.’
-
-I looked hard into the dwarf’s eyes. He bore my gaze for a minute
-steadily enough, and then tried to turn away.
-
-‘You have lied in your throat!’ I cried—‘you have lied, and you know
-you have lied. There are two wrecks on the shoal.’
-
-‘There may be a dozen for all I know,’ said the little man very
-stubbornly; ‘you may drown me if you will, but that will not put you
-nearer the treasures of the Santa Fè.’
-
-Captain Jem paused and looked round upon the men, as though he were
-collecting their thoughts. Just then, the boatswain hailed from the
-schooner that the weather was getting very ugly to the southward.
-We all looked up, and saw an ominous black cloud lying looming upon
-the sea, its upper edges gilded with a lurid glow, as though edged
-with red-hot iron. The regular trade wind, too, had ceased to blow,
-except in faint sickly puffs, and the schooner began to rise and sink
-upon great swelling undulations from the southward, so that loose
-ropes and blocks shook and rattled, and the gaffs of the foresail and
-mainsail swung to and fro with a creaking, wheezing sound. It was
-clear that something unpleasant was brewing.
-
-‘Fasten a spare oar to the line,’ says the captain, pointing to the
-rope which descended to the wreck, ‘we may as well buoy the place.’
-His directions were obeyed.
-
-‘Now, pull for the schooner. Lash that man’s arms there with a bit of
-spun-yarn; he has brought it upon himself.’ And in a minute we were
-safe on board, and the dwarf, who made no resistance, was thrust well
-pinioned into the cabin.
-
-‘We have no time to trifle,’ said the captain; and so we all thought,
-precious moments had been lost, without the symptoms of the weather
-having been attended to.
-
-‘We were looking for the gold,’ said the captain.
-
-‘And we were looking at you,’ replied the boatswain. In ten minutes
-the anchor was up, the boats hoisted in, the sails set double reefed,
-and the schooner beating to the southward against heavy puffs of wind
-and a great tumbling swell. Our object was to weather either of the
-branches or horns of the shoal, then we could either scud or lie
-to, having plenty of sea-room. What we feared was, that the force of
-the squalls would strike us before we got clear of the fork in which
-we were embayed. Meantime the sky was growing every moment of a more
-lurid colour, as though the arch of heaven had been a great vault
-of brazen metal, and the surf was breaking in awful surges upon the
-reefs.
-
-‘Captain,’ says Bristol Tom, who was at the tiller, ‘we shall not
-weather the point; the wind heads her every moment.’ And as he spoke,
-the sails flapped like thunder, and a great swell lifted the schooner
-and flung her bodily back a dozen fathoms. One of the men from the
-forecastle cried at the same time that the wind was coming, for that
-the sea was breaking white about a league away.
-
-‘We must run back through the shoal,’ says I.
-
-The captain paused a moment. ‘There is no other hope,’ quoth
-he. ‘Fetch the dwarf on deck;’ and immediately Bedloe made his
-appearance, and gazed anxiously at the weather. Captain Jem went
-below.
-
-‘You offered to pilot us already,’ I said, ‘and you know the shoal
-well. I have seen your chart of it. You must bring us through now.’
-
-Captain Jem at this moment returned on deck, carrying two large
-pistols.
-
-‘If the schooner as much as scrapes a ridge of sand,’ says he, and
-he pressed the muzzle of one of the pistols so hard upon the dwarfs
-forehead, that when he took it away there was a round blue ring left
-above the eyebrow; ‘if the schooner as much as taps one oyster upon
-the coral, you cease to live!’
-
-‘That is no news,’ answered the dwarf, with the old shrug of the
-shoulders; ‘if the schooner strikes we all of us cease to live. Pooh,
-pooh, man! bullying avails not now. We are all of us more near being
-drowned than I am of being shot. Put up your pistols.’
-
-I declare I positively began to admire the dwarf. His cool courage
-was heroic. Captain Jem turned all manners of colours, whistled,
-grinned, then tried to appear stern; and at last stuck the pistol
-into the waistband of his trousers, looking rather sheepish than
-otherwise. Then there was a pause, which the dwarf broke by saying in
-the old jeering tone—
-
-‘Well, captain, do you want a pilot?’
-
-‘Do you undertake to run the schooner through these shoals into the
-open sea to the northward?’ I replied.
-
-‘Why, I told you from the first I would run you into the open sea,’
-says the imperturbable Mr. Bedloe.
-
-‘Take charge of the schooner, then,’ quoth the captain.
-
-‘Unloose my arms,’ answered Bedloe. ‘I ought to have as good a chance
-as the others.’
-
-The captain hesitated.
-
-‘Wounds, man!’ cried the dwarf; ‘I give you my word of honour I am
-not going to take the schooner from you.’
-
-The cool impudence of the fellow was amusing; and so, stepping
-forward, I cut the rope-yarns which bound him.
-
-‘Now, then,’ quoth he to Bristol Tom and the captain, both of whom
-stood by the tiller, ‘look sharp for the pilot’s orders.’
-
-The Manxman stepped to the weather-beam, looked earnestly to windward
-and then aloft; after which he walked back whistling. The schooner
-was labouring heavily upon the swells, and the sky getting wilder and
-wilder.
-
-All at once, the man at the mast-head shouted—‘A sail!’
-
-We were all of us startled at the news.
-
-‘Not the Spanish frigate, Johnson?’ said I.
-
-‘No, no,’ returned the seaman. ‘It is a sort of boat—a big canoe. I
-can only see her when she lifts on the sea; but she carries a high
-mast forward, with a small mizen astern, and she is edging in for the
-side of the shoals. By God, sir, she is among them!’
-
-I was standing by the dwarf as we heard this. He leaped upon the
-bulwarks, clambered a few feet into the rigging, and then dropped
-upon the deck, exclaiming:—‘The Piragua!’
-
-‘What!’ says the captain, ‘your Piragua with the Indians and the
-Welshman?’
-
-‘That and no other,’ answered Bedloe. ‘You see, gentlemen, I have
-told you no lies.’
-
-‘The canoe is running for the lee of the large rock, where the dwarf
-lived,’ cries the man in the rigging.
-
-‘Then, by the Lord, they are more in love with coral reefs and
-sand-banks than I am!’ replied Captain Jem.
-
-‘I don’t know that they bean’t right, captain,’ cries the boatswain.
-‘That rock is big enough to make a good shelter under its lee; and
-there’s a little cove there, if they can make it, where the small
-canoe was, where an undecked craft will be much snugger in such
-weather as this than out in the open sea.’
-
-I was of the same opinion as the boatswain, and so I could see was
-Bedloe. All this time we continued head to sea, thrashing away at the
-great surges, and just holding our own.
-
-‘Pilot!’ cried the captain, ‘why do you not run through the channel
-at once, without waiting for the strength of the squall?’
-
-‘Because, captain,’ answered the little man, very promptly—‘because
-the wind comes in puffs, with lulls between; and neither I nor any
-other man can take a ship through these banks unless he has her in
-full command.’
-
-This was so reasonable that there was no more to be said, and we
-waited impatiently for the decisive minute. At length it came. A
-heavy dank breath of air increased gradually but surely, until the
-schooner careened over heavily before it. The horizon to windward was
-becoming more and more obscured, the waves broke into white crests
-round us, and Bedloe signed to put the helm up and keep the schooner
-away. As the head of the ship fell off, and the sheets of the two
-great sails tore and struggled as they were being eased off, the
-pilot cried to Captain Jem that he would run the schooner close past
-the rock where his tent was, for that the most direct channel lay by
-it. Captain Jem told him that the ship was now under his charge; and
-at the same time emphatically slapped the stock of the pistol in his
-belt, as a hint that the charge was a responsible one.
-
-In less than five minutes, we were running fast among the breakers.
-The squall was now blowing fiercely, with pelting rain, which mingled
-with the flying brine, torn up from the foaming tops of the breakers.
-The sea ran strange and broken in the channels of the reefs, jumping
-and tumbling about, furrowed and rent by the fury of the wind, and
-the cross sweeps of the great surges, which the lines of reef flung
-into different directions, and often caused to sweep round and round
-in great seething cauldrons of foam. Through this howling waste of
-waters the schooner flew like a meteor, plunging along the white
-tops of the seas, diverging now to one side, now to another, as the
-skilful eye of the pilot directed; all her motions kept thoroughly in
-hand, and leaving reef after reef, each avoided by a dexterous jerk
-of the helm, lying foaming behind.
-
-We were now in the thick of the shoal. Ahead of us, and on the
-starboard bow, the rock which had been the dwarf’s habitation, rose
-blackly out of the water. I saw by the course that we were steering
-that we would shave it closely, and I sprang into the fore-rigging to
-keep a sharp look out. As I did so, I saw the mast of the ‘Piragua’
-rocking beyond the coral ledge—the canoe being evidently well
-sheltered in the lee of the rock. The squall now grew heavier and
-heavier, and on we drove in the thick of it, the sea flashing and
-hissing around us. We were close upon the reef. I could have touched
-the coral with an oar, as the receding wave poured down its jagged
-ledges, when all at once Bedloe shouted with a voice, which, though
-shrill, was as clear as a trumpet—
-
-‘Starboard—hard a starboard!’
-
-I started round at the sound; and just at that moment, as the
-schooner’s bow sheered to port, I saw the form of Bedloe, one instant
-poised upon the bulwark, and the next projected by a desperate leap
-into the air, and plunging amid the silvery tumult of the surges;
-into which, however, the dusky form had not yet vanished, when
-Captain Jem’s pistols flashed and exploded with two rapid reports.
-Instinctively I turned ahead. The pestilent dwarf had by his last
-order sought to wreck the ship. Before us lay a barrier of coral,
-over which the sea poured, as a mighty river flashes over a weir.
-
-‘Port—hard a port—for the love of life—port!’ I roared.
-
-It was just in time; the schooner surged round from the reef,
-struggling and plunging in the tempest, and then shooting along the
-rock. We saw the piragua tossing on the broken water, and one of the
-naked crew in the act of leaping overboard with a line, no doubt to
-the aid of the dwarf, whose head, as he swam skilfully and strongly,
-favoured by the eddy, rose every minute upon the tops of the uneven
-and broken surges.
-
-A hoarse shout of rage burst, in one inarticulate cry, from every
-one on board the schooner, but we had our own lives to look after.
-Fortunately, we were now in the channel which I had been in the act
-of buoying, when we discovered the dwarf’s retreat. My marks I could
-not, of course, discern; but I well knew the general lie of the
-reefs, and keeping my station in the weather-fore-rigging, I mustered
-all my coolness to con the ship. We had a dozen of hair-breadth
-escapes as we flew along. Very often the squall blew with such fury
-that the whole surface of the sea, deep and shallow, was of the
-same whiteness. Then a temporary lull would enable me to see the
-whereabouts of the ledges and banks, which I had already surveyed,
-so that I was enabled to shout my directions to Captain Jem with
-something like confidence. But after all, it was terrible guess-work.
-A sharp eye to watch, a skilful hand to work the ship, a steady heart
-to keep that eye bright and that hand firm, were what we needed, and
-that happily we possessed, so that after near half an hour, during
-which we stood with hands clenched and teeth set, no man daring to
-draw a full breath, we shot out from the bosom of shoals, and knew
-from the heavy rolling of the swells that we were in deep water, and
-in the open sea.
-
-Lucky for us, it was not until then that the full fury of the squall
-came roaring down. The sky grew well nigh as mirk as midnight, and
-the tempest hurtled through the air like the sweep of chariots and
-mighty squadrons in the clouds.
-
-‘In with all! furl and brail—furl and brail!’ shouted Captain Jem.
-
-Happily, sail is easily taken off a fore-and-aft-rigged vessel. The
-struggling and flapping sheets of canvas were rapidly secured, the
-gaffs were lowered down upon deck, and the schooner was speedily
-running under bare poles dead to leeward. The squall, meanwhile,
-increased until it became almost a hurricane: the great waves were
-beaten down flat by the sheer force of the wind. We rushed along,
-the tempest whistling and howling in the rigging in the centre of a
-roaring bed of foam, which the wind caught up and drove through the
-air in clouds which almost blinded us. Presently, a blue flash of
-forked lightning tore through the blackness of the sky, accompanied
-by a fearful roar of thunder, and then flash followed flash, and
-peal succeeded peal, until, what with the tumult of wind and sea,
-the lashing of the rain, mingling with the brine, and the incessant
-bellowing of the thunder, it was no easy matter to give or to hear
-orders. As the rain poured down heavier and heavier, the fury of
-the wind abated. Presently there were lulls, and the sea began to
-rise and heave around. At length there fell upon us such a deluge of
-rain, that had the hatches been off, I am confident that in half an
-hour the ship would have foundered. The rain continued for some ten
-minutes, and then the great clouds broke up, and rolled hither and
-thither, showing streaks of blue sky, and cracks, as it were, through
-which the sunlight came slanting down athwart the gloom, tinging
-long strips of angry foaming water with its red fire. This was the
-break-up of the tornado, which had not lasted, in its strength, more
-than ten minutes, and, in an hour, we were under single-reefed sails,
-beating up against a heavy sea for the shoals again.
-
-We had now leisure to converse upon the conduct of Bedloe, which
-appeared to many of us to be strange and mad, but I saw a consistency
-and a purpose in it all through. The great error the dwarf had made
-was in coming on board of our ship; but I admired the cool candour
-with which he had disarmed our suspicions by telling us so much
-of what was true of his story, as soon as he imagined that I held
-the clue to the secret. Furthermore, I did not doubt that, had it
-not been for the appearance of the piragua in the nick of time, he
-would have carried us clear of the banks, but knowing that she was
-in the lee of the rock, and being well acquainted with the eddies
-of the reef, he had determined, by one bold push, to drown us and
-save himself. Opinions differed as to whether the piragua would
-not have been driven from her shelter in the full force of the
-hurricane, but there was only one sentiment as to the punishment
-which Bedloe deserved, and which, if ever he fell into our hands, we
-fully determined that he would receive. Meantime we were gradually
-working up to the shoal, and an hour before sunset we saw the long
-line of breakers, dotted here and there with dusky beads of rock,
-stretching out amid the blue rolling seas. You may be sure that many
-an eye was strained to make out the piragua. I got into the main-top
-with the best glass in the ship, and although it was difficult to
-make out anything with exactness, by reason of the violent motion
-of the schooner, yet I was pretty well convinced that the canoe
-was not under the lee of the ‘Dwarf’s Rock,’ as we called it; and,
-furthermore, that the crew had not landed there, for the canvas of
-the tent was torn, and streaming in tattered ribbons into the air.
-
-It was just before sundown that we learned the fate of the dwarf
-and his comrades. A great wave rising between us and the broad red
-disc of the sun as he set amid a streak of hazy vapour, we observed
-a black object tossing on the very crest of the sea. We trimmed the
-schooner’s course for this dim speck, and after losing and regaining
-sight of it many times, at length made out that it was a boat or
-canoe, waterlogged and abandoned. The sun was now beneath the
-horizon—the speeding twilight of the tropics was waning fast away.
-The stars were already glimmering, and the leaden-coloured sea, with
-its great dusky opaque waves, rolled blackly and hoarsely around us;
-when the schooner, plunging into a trough, swept within a couple
-of fathoms of the wreck. It was that of a large piragua, bottom
-upwards, part of her bows torn away, where she had crashed down upon
-a reef. As we went plunging by, a surge from our bows splashed over
-the piragua, and, rolling her round, as she wallowed log-like in the
-water, we all recognised the drowned corpse of Paul Bedloe lashed
-to the stump of the mast, his nerveless legs and arms jerking about
-with the wash of the water, his blue eyes open and staring, like the
-eyes of a fish, and his light hair now floating out when the sea rose
-above him, and anon, when it subsided, settling down and clinging
-round his white dead face. With the next heave of the sea the canoe
-turned over as it lay when we first saw it, and then drifted away
-down into the gathering darkness of the night.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVII.
-
- OF THEIR UNSUCCESSFUL SEARCH FOR THE SUNKEN TREASURE—WEARYING AT
- LENGTH OF THE UNDERTAKING, THEY PURSUE THEIR COURSE—THE LEGEND OF
- ‘NELL’S BEACON,’ OR THE ‘CORPUS SANT.’
-
-
-For three weeks and better did the ‘Will-o’-the-Wisp’ lie off and
-on by the shoals. For three weeks the launch and shallop were
-day by day employed searching and dragging the reefs, but we
-found no treasure-wreck. The remains of the ship to which Bedloe
-had conducted us were thoroughly searched, indeed the deck was
-altogether torn up, and some trifling amount of Dutch coin, with
-two good iron guns, and the small brass cannon were recovered, but
-we gained no richer prize. Day after day, even when the glare of
-the sun was at its fiercest, might our boats be seen floating along
-the channels of the reef, two men at either bow, leaning over the
-gunwale, so that their eyes were removed only an inch or so from
-the water: but, save coral and sand, they saw nought besides. Still
-I felt certain that the treasure lay upon the reefs, and we had
-many disputes as to the possibility of the dwarf having managed, by
-flinging certain fragments of rock, which we found upon the eastern
-edge of the shoal, and each of which was the nucleus of immense
-masses of clustering sea-weed, to hide the precious deposit from
-strange eyes. We all agreed that little or nothing of the ship could
-possibly be remaining; but, as it was likely that the treasure was
-shipped in strong boxes either of iron, or secured with that metal,
-it was quite possible that these lay in crevices of the rocks, their
-great weight mooring them, and that the dwarf employed his leisure
-time before our arrival in covering them with the sea-weed grown
-stones of which I spoke. But all these opinions were but idle wind.
-We knew not the truth. Some of the elder seamen would have it that
-the whole was the work of the devil; that the dwarf was a demon who
-haunted those lonely shelves to disturb and perplex poor mariners;
-and in the evening, when we sat upon deck smoking and drinking in the
-grateful twilight, many a dismal tale was rehearsed of phantoms of
-the sea, and particularly of the unearthly creatures whom many of the
-crew believed to dwell upon islands as yet unvisited by mariners, and
-who try to scare away the human intruders upon their domains.
-
-However, we at length got heartily tired of our sojourn amid the
-reefs, and the more so as we began to fear that we might miss the
-rich ship from Carthagena. A council was therefore held, at which
-we all agreed that we had wasted too much time already, seeking
-for the dwarf’s treasure, and that the sooner the ship’s head was
-turned to the southward the better. Accordingly, the next sunrise
-saw the boats hoisted up, our anchor safely catted at our bows, and
-the schooner running gaily upon her original course. We had rough
-weather and heavy seas ere we made the Samballas islands, to which we
-first intended to repair, and one stormy night I saw, for the first
-time, the appearance of that strange light which is sometimes seen on
-board ships at sea, and which the Spanish and Portuguese seamen know
-as the ‘corpus,’ or ‘corpus sant,’ and which our sailors sometimes
-call ‘Nell’s Beacon.’ The Spanish word seems to me to be clearly a
-corruption of ‘corpus sanctum’—the holy body—they tracing the light,
-which I believe to be nothing else than a mere harmless wandering
-meteor, to some religious or sacred origin. The night that the corpus
-sant appeared on board the Will-o’-the-Wisp was stormy and unsettled,
-the sky being piled with gloomy clouds, and the wind strong and
-gusty. I was sitting by the steersman, when, looking aloft, I saw
-something like a greenish-blue glare flickering along the weather end
-of the main cross-trees, just as if some one at a distance had been
-flashing a dark lantern through the rigging. I was rubbing my eyes,
-doubtful whether I had seen aright, when all at once the pale glimmer
-appeared, as it were, to become concentrated on one spot at the very
-end of the cross-trees, where it gleamed with a dim yet steady light,
-like a star.
-
-The boatswain had the helm, and I pointed it out to him.
-
-‘Nell’s Beacon,’ quoth he; ‘I know it well. When it burns high up in
-the rigging, then it is a good omen, and a sign of fair weather; but
-when it descends upon deck and moves to and fro then it is time for
-all who see it to bethink themselves of their sins.’
-
-Meanwhile the other men of the watch having also observed the light,
-began to congratulate themselves thereupon, only expressing fears
-that it would descend to the deck, for which cause they watched it
-very anxiously. Determined, however, to examine the thing minutely,
-I climbed up into the rigging, and although the boatswain tried to
-dissuade me, I got upon the cross-trees, and gazed upon the meteor as
-closely as I would do at the flame of a candle. The meteor surrounded
-the end of the spar upon which it appeared, gleaming with a sort of
-pale glow, which was not flame, but rather like the light produced by
-flame, sometimes having a very ghastly blue colour, like the blaze of
-burning spirits, and anon turning of a greenish tint. Although the
-wind blew strong, the corpus sant did not waver or flicker like a
-flame, and I passed my hand through and through it, without feeling
-inconvenience. During the time I remained aloft, the meteor was
-becoming more and more dim, and soon after I had descended to the
-deck it disappeared. The remainder of the watch we passed discoursing
-upon this phenomenon. Some of the sailors said it was a sort of sea
-glow-worm, and others that it was a jelly which shone; but neither
-of these opinions is correct. Upon asking what the Spanish and
-Portuguese sailors said of it, one Thomas Lomax, who had been twice a
-prisoner in a ship of the former nation, told us that the tradition
-of the Spaniards was to this effect:—
-
-A Spanish bark once set sail from Cadiz, bound for Sicily. They had
-very calm weather, and they feared at last that their water would
-run short. All the crew, therefore, made vows to St. Antonio, and
-promised to place a silver candlestick upon his shrine if he would
-send them a prosperous breeze. The captain of the ship alone refused
-to join in their prayers, saying that St. Antonio could no more send
-them a wind than a pig could see it, and vowing that at all events
-if it were not so, the saint was a shabby fellow not to give poor
-sailors a breeze without their having to rob their wives and families
-to pay him for it. But day after day passed by, and the sails still
-hung in unwinking folds from the lateen yards, and the reflection of
-the ship could be seen in the sea as in a mirror. One evening, after
-a very hot day, the air felt even closer than usual, and the captain
-told the men that he must reduce still further their allowance of
-water. That night, therefore, they redoubled their supplications to
-the saint, and the captain who, by-the-by, was a Frenchman, redoubled
-his abuse of him, swearing that St. Antonio could not muster as much
-wind as would blow out a candle, far less urge on a ship. The words
-had hardly been spoken when a great light shone upon the vessel, and,
-running to the stern, they all saw St. Antonio, with a halo round his
-head, coming walking upon the water towards them. At this they all
-fell upon their knees, and even the French captain grew pale, and his
-legs almost failed him. Meantime the saint walked upon the sea up to
-the stern, and placing his hand upon the taffrail of the ship, said—
-
-‘This to confound thy unbelief, thou contemner of holy men and
-things!’
-
-At the same giving the ship what appeared to be a slight push, but
-which flung her forward as if she had been a stone hurled from a
-sling. The saint having performed this feat, instantly vanished,
-and at the same moment a fearful storm, the like of which was never
-seen by man, suddenly arising, drove on the ship with the same
-rapidity as that which the hand of the saint had imparted to her.
-Meantime all the crew were on their knees praying to the Virgin to
-intercede for them with St. Antonio, and expecting nothing less
-than instant death. But the ship continued to drive with unearthly
-rapidity, although without injury, and beginning to take courage,
-they observed, on looking about, a bright light burning upon that
-part of the taffrail which the saint had touched with his hand. For
-three days and three nights the miraculous storm lasted. The ship
-flew through the water quicker than birds cleave the air, and the
-supernatural nature of the tempest was made still more evident by
-the fact that it was not general over the sea, but that within half
-a cable’s length from the ship the ocean and the air were either
-perfectly at rest, or a pleasant breeze was blowing, and vessels
-were sailing with a fair wind in the opposite direction to that in
-which the saint-cursed ship was driven. Still, however, the mariners
-did not cease to importune St. Antonio for pardon, and the captain
-was loudest in his prayers, and most lavish in his vows. At length,
-at midnight on the third night, the light, which had never ceased
-to burn, suddenly moved from its place, and flitting to the mast,
-began to ascend it. As the meteor rose into the air, the fury of
-the storm lulled. The mariners, seeing this, fell upon their knees
-and put up loud thanksgivings. The light continued to rise until it
-glittered upon the highest point of the rigging, to wit, the end of
-the great lateen yard, where having remained steady for some time,
-it gave a sudden bright flash, and then soared into the air, until
-the gazers could distinguish it no longer amid the stars. The wind
-then fell as suddenly as it had risen, and the strained ship again
-floated tranquilly upon unbroken water. When the day dawned, the
-crew saw land barely a league a-head of them, and a fishing-boat
-coming off soon after, they learned that they were off Cape Epiphane
-in the island of Cyprus, having traversed, in an incredibly short
-space of time, almost the whole length of the Mediterranean sea. A
-pleasant breeze, however, soon sprang up from the east, and having
-obtained what water and stores they needed, they turned the ship’s
-head westward, and arrived without accident at their port in Sicily,
-where great honours were paid to the shrine of St. Antonio. From that
-time to this, say the mariners of Spain, the light which the touch of
-a holy body—a corpus sanctum—created, has never been extinguished,
-but floats over the ocean, appearing now as a warning of approaching
-death, anon as a harbinger of hope to mariners.
-
-This was the Spanish tale of the Corpus Sant, and I now asked for the
-English legend of ‘Nell’s Beacon.’
-
-‘Why,’ quoth the boatswain, ‘I never heard it told; but often I have
-heard it sung both afloat and ashore, in the taverns at Limehouse or
-Portsmouth Point, and aboard many a ship in many a sea.’ Thereupon,
-all the watch desiring to hear the song, the boatswain, in a very
-coarse gruff voice, chanted the following stanzas, which, rude as
-they are, I put down just as I heard them:—
-
-
-The Legend of ‘Nell’s Beacon.’
-
- There are stormy seas do roll,
- Which the boldest well may dread,
- When the east wind whistles snell
- On the cliffs of Beachy Head.
- By that coast, tempest beaten,
- On the sea-weed clustered stones,
- Stout-hearted sailors many,
- Have laid their weary bones.
-
- From the sandy shores of Eastbourne,
- Nigh the rocks whereof I sing,
- Sailed a brave and lusty seaman,
- And his name was Richard King.
- He was captain of a trading sloop,
- Which voyaged unto the Seine,
- And ’twas Beachy Head he always made
- When he returned again.
-
- For there, from eve to dawning,
- A beacon always shone
- During the time, whate’er it was,
- That Richard King was gone.
- From the window of a cottage
- That beam came, ever bright,
- For there sat Nelly, Richard’s wife,
- And trimmed the lamp all night.
-
- She trimmed it, for she knew
- That her husband dear would gaze,
- When the white cliffs loomed a-head,
- For those love-enkindled rays;
- And when he saw them flicker,
- Through the darkness of the night,
- He would straightways cry right cheerily
- ‘There’s Nelly’s Beacon Light.’
-
- But, ah! these long night watches,
- They paled poor Nelly’s cheek;
- Her eye was bright and fevered,
- But her step grew slow and weak.
- Her husband bent above her,
- And she looked up in his face—
- ‘I’m wearing fast away,’ quoth she;
- ‘I go unto my place.
-
- But you are bound to sea, dear,
- To the stormy Spanish shore;
- Look, Richard, look upon your Nell,
- You ne’er may see her more!
- But watch when you return, dear,
- You will know that I am dead,
- If no light shines out to greet you
- From the top of Beachy Head.
-
- ‘Yet death shall never part us,
- For, if it lawful be,
- My soul shall fly to you, dear,
- Athwart the roaring sea;
- But not a ghastly sheeted corpse
- Shall I appal your sight,
- You will see an airy Beacon,
- And my soul will be the Light.’
-
- The storm roared loud at midnight,
- With sleet, and wind, and rain;
- The struggling ship tossed wildly
- On the rocky coast of Spain:
- When suddenly the captain cried—
- ‘Oh God, my wife is dead!’
- Upon the topmast gleamed a light—
- The Light of Beachy Head!
-
- * * * * *
-
- Two score of years went slowly by,
- And again the storm-blast blew,
- Old Richard King, with long grey hair,
- Spake cheerily to the crew.
- ‘Oh look aloft, my gallant boys,
- There’s hope within our sight,
- A kindly spirit watches us—
- There’s Nelly’s Beacon Light!’
-
- But as he spoke, the Beacon
- Came floating through the air,
- The captain knew the sign—he knelt
- In thanksgiving and prayer.
- The tempest swept him from the deck,
- But as he sunk like lead,
- Above his forehead shone the light
- Which gleamed from Beachy Head!
-
- And still in time of tempest
- Does Nelly’s Beacon burn,
- Sometimes it shines aloft to cheer,
- Sometimes alow to warn;
- But it reads us all this lesson—
- True love is never dead,
- The symbol shines on every sea
- That shone from Beachy Head!
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVIII.
-
-A KNAVE OF THE CREW PLAYING WITH COGGED DICE IS KEEL-HAULED.
-
-
-Four days after leaving the reefs, we saw land ahead, and presently
-were running in amid the clusters of the Samballas Isles. On every
-side of us, these rich islands flung, as it were, their masses of
-foliage into the sea; bushes clothing the rocks where such existed,
-and at other points thick mangrove woods, the stems of the trees
-often covered with oysters, growing far into the water. These forests
-appeared to swarm with birds and beasts. We heard the loud screams
-of thousands of unknown fowls resounding from the woods; and often,
-as we skirted the shore, watching places where the trees did not
-grow thick, we descried troops of monkeys going chattering along, or
-herds of peccary and deer, breaking through the bushes. Sea-birds
-also abounded. Great clouds of plovers flew, wheeling and circling
-along the shore, and the white sandy beaches and the sea were dotted
-with turtles basking in the sun, or lazily sleeping on the top of
-the smooth water. The Samballas Islands are thinly inhabited by
-scattered tribes of Indians, who subsist by hunting and fishing,
-and are very willing to aid as guides or pilots to the English and
-French privateers who put in here; so that the first canoe which we
-saw made directly towards us, and the two Indians who guided it came
-on board very readily, and were treated with brandy and wine, much
-to their satisfaction. From them we learned that several privateers
-had been lately in these islands, to careen and provision; and that
-the Spaniards from Porto Bello and Carthagena, had sent a fleet of
-armadilloes, as they are called, being small vessels of war, which
-had swept all the channels between the islands, and had captured one
-privateer, a tartan of four guns, commanded by Captain Coxon, having
-surprised her in a creek where she was careening. We questioned
-these Indians respecting the galleon which the Spanish prisoner
-at Jamaica had told us of. They know that many rich ships sailed
-annually from Carthagena to Old Spain, but could tell no particulars,
-conjecturing, however, that if any vessel with a freight of price
-were now fitting for sea, she would sail after the return of the
-armadilloes to Carthagena, judging that they would have, for the
-present, cleared the coast. This information, which jumped with our
-own ideas, made us very anxious to take in what provisions we stood
-in want of, and be off to the westward; and the same afternoon the
-friendly Indians piloted the schooner into a very snug bay, where we
-lay with trees all round us, except at one point where an opening
-in the woods conducted to a noble savannah, whither we often went
-to hunt. While we lay here, all hands were fully occupied. Upon the
-beach, near the schooner, we erected a place for preparing boucan,
-which we preferred to regularly salted meat: and of which Nicky
-Hamstring, who had a natural turn for cooking in all its branches,
-was appointed superintendent. Then the Mosquito men went daily in
-their canoe, and struck turtle and manatee. Hunting parties, whereof
-I generally made one, explored the woods and brought good store of
-peccary and deer down to the boucan. We shot also the tender young
-monkies, who often made my heart sore by their screaming and moaning
-when they felt the lead, and by the pitiful way in which, when they
-came by a broken bone, they would handle the useless limb, and grin
-and weep with the pain. Besides these, we made food of the guanas or
-yellow lizards, who live amid the branches, and love to bask in the
-sun upon the topmost boughs, and also of a species of red land-crab,
-which our men call soldiers, from their colour, and which run nimbly
-about, generally at the roots of trees, hiding themselves quickly
-in holes, and burrowing like rabbits. The Indians who conducted our
-schooner into the bay, lived with others not far off, in smoky huts,
-which were surrounded by patches of cleared land, wherein they grew
-good store of yams and plantains, which they sold very willingly
-for hatchets, saws, and such like implements, with powder and lead.
-Meantime, while a great part of the crew were thus busy on shore,
-Captain Jem, with the hands who remained on board the schooner, was
-occupied in changing her appearance as much as possible; for we
-knew that the Spaniards have no lack of spies either in Jamaica or
-the other English islands, and we misdoubted that an account of the
-schooner had been sent to Cuba, and from thence to the Main. We,
-therefore, repainted the ship, making a great yellow streak from
-stem to stern, with false ports, and also made a shift to alter, to
-the eye at least, the trim of the ship, by placing false bulwarks
-towards the stern, which heightening her from the foremast all the
-way aft—the painted streak being made to correspond with the new
-bulwarks—caused the schooner to have a clumsy look, as though she
-were down by the head, in consequence of carrying an ill-stowed
-cargo. We also changed the set of the masts, by putting heavy strains
-upon the rigging; and lastly, we patched the sails, although they
-were new and good, with old canvas; conducting our operations with
-such good effect, that the crew swore to a man, that had they been
-away for a week, they would never have recognised the schooner for
-the ‘Will-o’-the-Wisp.’
-
-Being at length in readiness for our cruise, we towed the ship out
-of the little bay, and commenced beating to windward through the
-islands, passing the isle called Las Sound, where the Buccaneers have
-a legend, that the heart of Sir Francis Drake lies buried in four
-caskets, of lead, of iron, of silver and of gold. I see no reason,
-however, for believing that his heart was not in his body when
-that was committed to the deep in the bay of Porto Bello, amid the
-thunder of artillery, and the crash of the martial music, in which
-the great admiral so much delighted. As we worked up against strong
-westerly breezes, we met with several fleets of large canoes, laden
-with sugar, hogs, yams, and corn, running before the trades; but as
-we were now approaching Carthagena, we thought it most prudent to
-let these piraguas pass by unmolested, hoisting Spanish colours, and
-making as though we were a friendly trader. So in due time, we left
-the westernmost of the Samballas keys to the leeward, and stood off
-to the north-west, designing to make a long stretch out to sea, so as
-to prevent any intelligence of our whereabouts being conveyed along
-the main land to Carthagena.
-
-Towards the afternoon of the day on which we cleared the Samballas, I
-having the charge of the deck, could not help noticing the miserable
-plight of one Simon Radley, a young sailor, who was a very quiet
-well-behaved fellow, and a favourite on board. When we left Jamaica,
-he had been very well dressed in seaman fashion; but now, he was
-clothed merely in rags, without a shirt, and his shoes were only bits
-of canvas swathed round his feet, and very coarsely sewn together.
-Besides all this, the poor fellow looked almost broken-hearted, and
-went about his work very sadly,
-
-‘Simon Radley,’ quoth I ‘how came you in this plight? Have you
-lost all your clothes? Surely if you have, your comrades will lend
-you some, and you can make it up to them with the first of your
-prize-money.’
-
-Well, at first the fellow would answer never a word. At length he
-muttered that he had been unlucky, very unlucky, but that it was
-nobody’s fault but his own, and that he would be better off soon. I
-insisted, however, on knowing what he had done with his clothes, upon
-which, after a great deal of stammering and hesitation, he plucked up
-his heart, and said broadly, that I had no business with his clothes,
-and that, if he chose to wear a clout, or paint himself and go half
-naked like the savages, it was nothing to me, or to any one else, so
-long as he did his duty manfully. Just as he was speaking, up came
-the boatswain, John Clink.
-
-‘Simon Radley,’ says the old fellow, ‘you speak like a fool. It
-concerns us all, to see our comrades so bestowed as that they shall
-have the best chance of keeping their health, and not turning sick
-upon our hands. Now, I know where your clothes are, well. I have had
-my eye on you for some days past. Your clothes are in George Bell’s
-chest, with a good quantity of the clothes of the other men as well.’
-
-‘Hush, hush,’ says Radley, ‘there is honour in these things. If they
-are in George Bell’s chest, it is because they belong to him.’
-
-‘But how?’ cries I. ‘Have you sold the clothes, Simon?’
-
-‘Sold them—no,’ says Clink. ‘He has lost them, or been cheated of
-them, at dice, with that fellow Bell, who is a sneaking vagabond, and
-always skulking out of the way, whenever he is wanted.’
-
-I remembered now that I had very often seen Bell playing dice with
-others of the crew, but had taken no particular notice, such games
-being very common among privateersmen.
-
-‘And so you have had bad luck, Simon?’ rejoined I.
-
-‘Bad luck,’ interrupted Clink: ‘yes, and most of those have bad luck
-who play with George Bell.’
-
-The conversation continuing, we gradually drew from Radley, that he
-had played with Bell for all the ready money which he possessed on
-leaving Jamaica, and lost it; that then he had played for a good
-set of mathematical instruments, and lost them; that then he had
-played for all his clothes, and lost them; and, although for some
-time his shipmates had supplied him, that he had lost in succession
-every article of clothing so given to him, in the same way; and
-that, finally, he had played for and lost his chances of prize-money
-during the whole cruize. All this the poor fellow told with great
-reluctance, seeming to consider such disclosures as a breach of
-honour; but on John Clink saying that, in his belief, Bell had been
-a common sharper in London, and had bubbled poor Radley out of his
-property, Simon grew very indignant, and swore that, if it were so,
-he would have Bell’s blood. However, we pacified him, and made him
-understand that before making any charge, we must have better proof.
-George Bell at this time being below, and in his hammock, I called
-up a number of the crew in succession, all of whom said that they
-had played with Bell, and that they had never won anything; that if,
-now and then, a cast of the dice was in their favour, yet that they
-always rose the losers. Some of these men had had their suspicions
-of Bell’s play, but as they had never compared notes, they were not
-aware, until I questioned them, how very similar all their cases
-were. They knew, indeed, that Simon Radley had been stripped, but
-they were loath to accuse a shipmate of foul play.
-
-‘Why, then,’ quoth John Clink, ‘that fellow, Bell, must own about
-half the property in the ship, if your tales be all true. This must
-be looked into.’
-
-‘With whose dice do you play?’ says I: and they all answered, that
-generally it was with Bell’s for that several men who had brought
-dice on board had lost them, they knew not how, but Bell had several
-sets. This information increased our suspicions very much, and
-desiring all hands to keep the matter to themselves, and by no means
-to give a hint to Bell that he was suspected, I informed Captain Jem
-of the whole affair.
-
-‘The snivelling, cur-hearted miscreant!’ quoth honest Captain Jem,
-his plump red cheeks glowing with indignation. ‘I never saw anything
-good in that fellow since he came on board. He is a pitiful skulk,
-and never stirs out of his hammock except when he is driven. It was
-he who counselled us to strike to the Spanish frigate, but if we
-find him out in his roguish tricks his back shall so smart for it,
-as shall cause him to think that his spine be stuffed full of pepper
-instead of marrow.’
-
-So it was determined that Bell should be closely watched, and the
-dice which he was so fond of using, examined at the first convenient
-opportunity. Nor had we long to wait for its occurrence. In a little
-more than an hour, the suspected culprit came on deck, not thinking
-any harm, and going to the cook-house returned with a portion of
-boucanned pork, off which he made a very good dinner, with the help
-of a clasp-knife, and then having washed down the meat with several
-hearty draughts of brandy, he accosted my old friend Le Picard, and
-asked him whether he would shake a wrist with him. Now Picard had
-been also below and asleep, when the investigation into Mr. Bell’s
-character had been going on, and the men having kept their own
-counsel, Le Picard had no idea of what was in the wind. So presently,
-they sat down and began to play upon the combings, or ledge of the
-hatchway, Bell having produced the dice and dice-boxes. I watched the
-suspected sharper very closely when the game was going on, and noted
-his general sly down-cast look, and the small way which he opened
-his eye-lids, always peering about him with suspicious blinking
-eyes. Then, again, I observed his hand, which, although dirty and
-tarry enough, was not the hand of a man who had been all his life
-accustomed to handle ropes and marlin-spikes. Meanwhile, quite a
-circle of spectators gathered round the players, a circumstance
-not usual, as the stakes were trifling, but which Le Picard took
-no notice of. Bell, on the other hand, looked often about him, and
-seemed puzzled at the interest which so many of the crew took in the
-matter. However, he said nothing, but played on, so far as I could
-see very fairly, and the luck went from one to the other, as is usual
-in the game. At last, Le Picard grew impatient.
-
-‘Come,’ quoth he ‘_Allons, mon camerade, jouons plus fortément._ Let
-us play for a better stake.’
-
-‘I am agreeable,’ replied the other, softly.
-
-‘_C’est bien, alors._ Let it be a double doubloon; I have not many
-left.’
-
-The Frenchman pulled out the piece of gold, and placed it on the
-ledge of the hatchway. Bell, after some searching, real or pretended,
-plucked another piece from his pocket, holding, as I observed, the
-dice all the while in his hand.
-
-Captain Jem, who stood by me, did not fail to observe this as well as
-I, and whispered to me that the fellow by this manœuvre might well
-have changed the ivory. I nodded.
-
-‘A thunderstorm, or a single flash?’ says Bell, meaning, shall we
-decide the game by one cast, or in a great many.
-
-‘Oh, one flash; short and sweet!’ quoth the French man. Both of them
-rattled the dice and flung them forth.
-
-‘Trays,’ called out Le Picard.
-
-‘Sixes,’ exclaimed Bell; ‘the money is mine,’ and he grasped the gold
-greedily.
-
-‘I will hold you doubles or quits,’ cried Le Picard, in true gambling
-spirit.
-
-‘Well, if you want your revenge, I suppose I must not say no,’
-answered the other, in a quiet unobtrusive tone.
-
-The dice were again thrown, and this time the Frenchman had quatres,
-and Bell, as before, sixes. Muttering a great oath, poor Picard
-fished up the stakes from the bottom of his pocket, and was handing
-them to the winner, when Captain Jem cried in a loud voice, ‘Stop.’
-
-Both players looked up in surprise.
-
-‘Bell,’ said the captain, sternly, ‘hand me over that dice.’
-
-‘Why, captain,’ quoth the other, in a cringing tone, getting suddenly
-very pale, and looking quickly all about him; ‘why, captain, there
-has been no foul play, I hope? We are gentlemen adventurers on board
-this ship.’
-
-And, with that, his hand stole slily towards his pocket, as if to
-deposit there his winnings. Observing this motion, however, I grasped
-his wrist and defeated his intention, the dice falling from his
-fingers. At the same time, Captain Jem caught him by the collar of
-his doublet, crying out—
-
-‘Why, thou booby, thine own words condemn thee; who spoke of foul
-play but yourself? I only asked you for the dice, and you straightway
-think you are accused of cheating.’
-
-At this Bell looked sheepish enough, but presently recovering
-himself, began to bully and curse, swearing that he was a gentleman
-and a man of honour, and requesting to know by what right his dice
-had been taken from him.
-
-‘Come here, Simon Radley,’ says Captain Jem, and Simon stood forth,
-shaking his clenched fist at Bell.
-
-‘Have you not lost every farthing you possessed, as well as your
-clothes and your chances for the cruise, to this man?’ says the
-boatswain.
-
-Simon replied that it was so, and was entering into particulars, when
-Bell burst out with a great affectation of scorn and indignation—
-
-‘A pretty fellow,’ quoth he, ‘to game with a gentleman, and then,
-when fortune is adverse, to go and prate of your losses, and charge
-your adversary with foul play! Go to, man! had I lost, I never would
-have accused you of cheating. But you throw no dice with me again.’
-
-‘No, that you may depend upon,’ answered Radley.
-
-‘Stay,’ cried Captain Jem, ‘we are going but rashly to work. Let all
-the men here who have diced with George Bell hold up their hands.’
-
-Thereupon, more than two-thirds of the crew made the sign.
-
-‘Good,’ replied the captain; ‘now, let those who have lost money, or
-aught else to him, hold up their hands.’
-
-Nearly the same number of hands were immediately displayed. Bell grew
-yellow in the face, and glared about him with fierce spite.
-
-‘Good again,’ continued the captain; ‘Mr. Bell, I must congratulate
-you; fortune has been very kind to you—very kind indeed. Now, let
-those who have won money or aught else of George Bell, hold up their
-hands.’
-
-Two hands were raised, and their owners being interrogated, it
-appeared that they had gained, one of them, not more than a couple of
-groats, and the other merely a small rusty pistol, which had burst
-the first and only time he had fired it, and against which he had
-staked, being incited by Bell, a good perspective glass.
-
-‘So, then, gentlemen and comrades,’ pursued Captain Jem, ‘the case
-stands thus: here are a score of you have played with this man;
-and, although each man of that score ought to have had as good a
-chance of winning as Bell, yet the fellow has beaten you all, one
-after another; and the only winnings from him have been contemptible
-matters not worthy speaking of.’
-
-The crew here uttered a loud murmur of acquiescence, and some of them
-began to threaten Bell with their fists. Still he tried to put a good
-face on the matter, although his tongue faltered as he spoke.
-
-‘You are mistaken, gentlemen,’ he cried, ‘indeed you are; I will
-take my Bible oath that I played fair; nay, if you do not believe
-me, I am willing to give up all my winnings, and surely that ought
-to satisfy everybody. But I assure you, comrades, if I were to be
-hanged this minute, I would still say that you had no wrong from me.
-I am incapable of cheating, gentlemen! I do not understand how to cog
-dice, upon my soul; indeed, indeed I do not.’
-
-‘That fellow’s tongue would hang him if there were but one rope in
-the world,’ says the boatswain; ‘he was the first to talk of foul
-play, and now he is the first to talk of cogged dice!’
-
-‘We will soon settle that matter,’ says the captain, ‘and that by
-splitting open the ivory.’
-
-‘Oh, certainly, certainly, I agree to that,’ says Bell; ‘here are my
-dice, sir,’ and he whipped out several cubes from his pocket.
-
-‘No, no,’ interrupted I, ‘never mind these; we will try the dice with
-which you won the two doubloons e’en now.’ And one of the men having
-fetched a hammer, I placed the morsel of ivory upon the ledge of the
-hatchway. Upon seeing this, Bell went down plump upon his knees, and
-raised a dismal howl.
-
-‘Ah, you can be penitent enough now, chicken-heart!’ says Captain
-Jem; whilst I, having splintered the dice with a blow, we discovered
-a small bent piece of lead, very neatly inserted in one of the
-specks of the deuce side of the cube, not, however, drilled
-perpendicularly into the ivory, but artificially deposited in a sort
-of burrowing hole, running along just under the surface of that side
-of the square. It was evident, that to prepare a dice in this fashion
-required a hand very skilful and well accustomed to the work. The
-men crowded round to see it, uttering furious menaces against the
-convicted sharper, who never moved from his knees, but continued to
-supplicate most piteously for mercy.
-
-‘Mercy!’ exclaimed Captain Jem; ‘mercy, forsooth. Thou art one of the
-first privateersmen I ever heard of cheating his comrades, and thou
-shalt smart for it, or I no longer command this schooner.’
-
-‘Do not flog me—for mercy’s sake, do not flog me!’ the fellow bawled;
-‘I cannot bear flogging—it will kill me—it will be murder if you flog
-me. I was flogged once, and the doctor said it all but killed me;’
-and so, crying and howling, the pitiful creature cast him down upon
-the deck, and bemoaned himself in the most abject misery of spirit.
-
-‘Flogged before,’ said the boatswain. ‘Ay, I warrant thee. Aboard
-what ship?’
-
-‘Aboard no ship at all,’ roared the culprit. ‘On shore. Oh dear!—oh,
-dear!’
-
-‘On shore,’ answered the boatswain. ‘At the cart’s tail I presume?’
-
-‘Yes, yes,’ cried Bell; ‘but I give you my word of honour, sir—my
-sacred word of honour, that I was not guilty then. It was another
-man.’
-
-‘Not guilty then,’ says Nicky Hamstring. ‘No; no more than you are
-now, I dare affirm.’
-
-The miserable devil gave no answer, but made as though he would catch
-the legs of the men about him, and cling to them. In all my life I
-never saw such a pitiful hound.
-
-‘Keel-haul the fellow,’ says one of the men, ‘and see whether the
-brine won’t wash the roguery out of him.’ And the others joined in
-the cry: ‘Yes, yes, keel-haul him.’
-
-At this the culprit sat up upon the deck and looked earnestly in the
-faces of the men through his tears. I do not think he understood what
-keel-hauling meant.
-
-‘Anything,’ says he, whining like a hungry cat; ‘anything sooner than
-flogging.’
-
-‘Very good,’ says Captain Jem. ‘Be it so. Truly, on second thoughts,
-it would be degrading hemp to put it to any other use about such a
-scoundrel, except hanging him.’
-
-Meantime, half a dozen of the men, in great glee at the anticipated
-ducking, went about the preparations without loss of time.
-
-The punishment of keel-hauling, I premise, that we borrowed from the
-Dutch. Its name describes its nature. The prisoner is fastened to
-a rope led under the vessel’s keel, and hauled beneath her bottom,
-as often as his guilt seems to require. It is evident that this is
-a punishment the severity of which depends greatly upon the size of
-the ship, and the frequency with which the process is repeated. To
-be hauled under the keel of a great ship of war is a very different
-thing from being hauled under the keel of a small sloop; but in
-order to give the punishment its requisite severity on board small
-craft, the culprit is often hauled all along the keel, being let
-over the bows, and taken up at the stern; a process by which he is
-sure to be at least half drowned and half scraped to death by the
-rough barnacles and jagged shell fish which generally encase a ship’s
-bottom. In the present case it was determined, however, that Bell
-should undergo the easier mode of punishment, and be hauled from
-bulwark to bulwark, but the dose was to be administered twice, giving
-him a breathing-time between. Accordingly, by the help of a sounding
-lead, first a thin line and afterwards a stout cord were conducted
-under the ship’s keel, Mr. Bell watching the process with great
-anxiety.
-
-‘What—what are you going to do with me?’ at length he cried,
-beginning to comprehend the nature of his punishment. ‘You do not
-mean to drag me under the ship?’
-
-‘You have hit it my hearty,’ says the boatswain; ‘hit it to a tee.
-Yes; we will give you an opportunity of inspecting the run of the
-schooner, and if you fail to observe all its beauties the first time,
-don’t break your heart, you will have another chance immediately
-after.’
-
-At this the cowardly animal began to howl and blubber again.
-
-‘You will drown me, you will; it’s murder. There were sharks about
-the ship all yesterday. I will never come up alive! Have mercy on me!
-I have a wife and family in England. I would rather be flogged than
-put overboard. I would rather be flogged, indeed I would.’
-
-At this moment Captain Jem came up.
-
-‘Rather be flogged, would he? A minute ago he sang another tune.
-Why, you discontented thief,’ roared the captain, ‘you would not be
-pleased even although we were to hang you. Come, men, bear a hand,
-and have him overboard in a trice.’
-
-Immediately, half a dozen stout fellows flung themselves upon the
-miserable culprit. He roared, swore, and prayed, all in a breath,
-kicked out with his legs and arms, and sought to bite and scratch
-like a wild cat. But he was speedily mastered, his arms pinioned
-securely, his ankles tied together, and the rope which ran under the
-keel made fast under his armpits. He was then lifted and carried to
-the larboard bulwarks, half a dozen men holding the end of the rope,
-which passed beneath the keel and came up on the starboard side,
-while two or three hands had charge of the continuation of the line,
-so as to steady his descent in the first dive, and to pull him back
-by in the second.
-
-All this time the vagabond never ceased to abuse and swear at us,
-seeing that cries for mercy availed not. Captain Jem gave the word—
-
-‘Heave and pull,’ and instantly Mr. Bell went with a splash into the
-sea, struggling for a moment on the surface, and then, as the men on
-the starboard side hauled the rope, disappearing in the water.
-
-‘Rattle him round,’ says the captain. ‘He must not drown for all he
-is such a villain.’ The men ran across the deck with the rope; there
-was a surge and a jerk, when the poor devil struck the projecting
-keel, but he was instantly dragged beneath it, and the next moment
-he made his appearance on the larboard side, struggling, panting and
-coughing up the water, his face all blue and bleeding from having
-been scraped along the bottom, and his clothes torn by the jagged
-shells of the barnacles.
-
-‘O, Lord!’ he gasped; ‘murder—it is—murder;’ and then the coughing
-well-nigh choked him.
-
-‘Down with him again,’ cried the captain. The end of the rope which
-had been before used as a guy was promptly manned, and Bell again
-disappeared beneath the water, was again rudely jerked against the
-keel, and then hauled up the side of the ship, and cast upon deck all
-bleeding and insensible, with his hands blue and cramped, and his
-limbs quite limp and motionless. By Captain Jem’s direction he was
-held up by the legs, when presently he vomited up a great quantity
-of sea water, and then began to stir and moan, with great fits of
-coughing. His hands and legs were then released, and he managed to
-sit up on deck, leaning against the mast, and looking as if he had
-just wakened out of a dream.
-
-‘Let this be a warning to you, Mr. Bell,’ said the captain, ‘how
-you play dice in future. I presume you will only stay in this ship
-until you have a chance of going on board another. None of your own
-property, however you came by it, will be taken away, but all that
-you cheated your comrades of must be restored.’
-
-Accordingly, Bell’s chests were opened, a general distribution took
-place, and that evening Simon Radley appeared in his former attire.
-As for the sharper himself, we afterwards learned that he had been a
-well-known rogue in London, and after having been twice flogged at
-the cart’s tail, had been tried for ring-dropping, and transported
-to the plantations of Virginia, from which he managed to escape, and
-after divers adventures in the West Indies—whereof the greater part
-were more complimentary to his ingenuity than to his honesty—he had
-shipped on board our schooner at Jamaica, as the reader has seen.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIX.
-
-WE CRUISE OFF CARTHAGENA AWAITING THE GALLEON, AND I FALL INTO THE
-HANDS OF THE SPANIARDS
-
-
-In three days after leaving the Samballas Islands, we had beat so
-far to the norwest, that we counted upon being rather to windward
-of Carthagena, and from nine to twelve leagues distance from the
-coast. The west winds blow here with very little intermission,
-the land-breeze being very slight when it does come, which is but
-seldom. It was necessary now to determine exactly upon our mode of
-proceeding, and this was the plan we adopted. The prize which we
-expected was a private Patache, or treasure-ship, which, not waiting
-the convoy of the great fleet which sails once in every three years
-from the West Indies for Spain, intended, as we were informed by
-Mr. Pratt’s prisoner, to risk the chances of the homeward passage
-unprotected. Now, it was clear, that the first thing which we had to
-do, was to ascertain whether the Patache, or galleon, was still in
-Carthagena, and if so, when she would probably come out. Our next
-care would be to keep to sea, and watch the coast and the harbour,
-so as, if possible, to prevent the galleon putting off unknown to
-us; while, at the same time, we managed so as to prevent any alarm
-being excited upon the coast. With this view, we would, of course,
-run in tolerably close with the land at nights, keeping further in
-the offing during the day, and showing as little sail as possible.
-But our first business, as I have said, was clearly to ascertain that
-the mouse was actually in the hole; and that we might be sure, we
-determined to venture well in towards the harbour that very night,
-and, if possible, capture some small coasting craft or fisherman,
-who could give us the information which we required. Accordingly, we
-turned the schooner’s head to the southward, and ran along with a
-pleasant breeze abeam. By sunset we saw the land; and so correct was
-our reckoning, and so skilful our pilots, that John Clink and Captain
-Jem, who knew the coast well, pronounced the hummock, on which we
-were gazing, to be a high hill just behind the city of Carthagena, on
-which there stands a cathedral, which boasts of a very rich shrine,
-dedicated to the Holy Virgin, and of which more hereafter. Carthagena
-itself is principally built upon a small sandy island in a bay. The
-city lies upon the seaward side of the island, which is connected, by
-a long wooden bridge, with the suburbs or faubourgs along the main
-coast, the strait being, as may be supposed, a mere belt of shallow
-water. Well, by ten o’clock, we saw the lights of Carthagena quite
-plainly ahead of us; and afraid of venturing too near, we hove to,
-and kept a good look out around us. But the sea was as shipless,
-as though it heaved round a desolate island. The breeze was light
-and fitful, and we lay tossing on the long swell, our bows plunging
-deeply, and our gaffs and sails creaking and surging in perfect
-solitude. One by one the lights on shore disappeared, as the citizens
-went to bed, quite unwitting who was watching the gleam from their
-casements; and, presently, the dusky line of the shore was unbroken
-even by the twinkling of a single lantern. All at once, however, we
-saw a bright glow begin to shine forth from the top of the hill which
-I have mentioned. At first, we thought it a fire breaking out in a
-large and lofty house; but, presently, I discerned that it was the
-cathedral of _Nuestra a Senora de Papa_, lighted up for some night
-service. It was very brave to trace the outline of the great arched
-windows, all shining, as it were, with different-coloured fire, by
-reason of the stained glass, covered with the figures of martyrs, and
-angels, and saints; but when I was intently gazing at this glorious
-sight, John Clink, the boatswain, suggested that we might well run in
-closer. ‘For,’ quoth he, ‘all the people of the town will be at their
-devotions, this place being the very Loretto of the West Indies.’
-The boatswain’s advice was followed, and we edged in with the land,
-until we could hear the sound of the surf very distinctly, and made
-out furthermore—the stars shining out somewhat—that there were
-several large ships and many smaller craft in the bay. Not daring to
-approach these too closely in the schooner, the shallop was got out
-with little noise, and I was appointed to go in her to reconnoitre.
-I made the men muffle their oars with canvas, and we agreed that the
-schooner should show two lights, one above the other, for a space of
-thirty seconds, every ten minutes, until we returned. I also took
-a dark-lantern in the boat, and we pulled silently away from the
-schooner towards the land. Presently the white glimmer of the surf
-could be seen plainly, close ahead of us; and so we pulled leisurely
-along the outer edge, making for that part of the bay where the
-shipping lie, somewhat to the westward of the town. We paused on our
-oars now and then, and listened very attentively for sounds of alarm.
-But none came. There was a holy calm abroad upon the night, and the
-stars shone down through the stirless air. The coast seemed like a
-dark cloud lying on the water, except where, at its highest ridge,
-the festival tapers gleamed from out the great cathedral. We sat as
-men spell-bound, gazing on the beauty of it. Presently, it appeared
-as though great folding doors had been flung open, a burst of light,
-like a glory, streamed forth from what was a vision of pillars and
-arches, and great gleaming aisles; and falling on the broad steps
-leading to the portals, streamed over a dusky crowd of worshippers,
-men and women, kneeling with almost prostrate forms upon the marble
-ledges; and at the same instant, the mighty swell of a great organ,
-and the deep peal of a thousand mingled voices, rose solemnly up,
-overflowing, as it were, the very atmosphere, and mingling with the
-dim surf-music, as though both sea and land would join their tones
-in that great harmony. So, rude sailors as we were, we could not but
-listen, and in our hearts, adore. It was a Latin chant the people
-sung. Sometimes it fell so low, that we could hear but a faint and
-distant hum. Anon it rose, and pealed, and rung so gloriously out,
-that I could discern the very syllables of that mighty chorus, of
-‘Jubilate, Jubilate, Jubilate. Amen.’
-
-At length the organ ceased, and there was silence.
-
-‘Very well sung,’ said Simon Radley, who pulled the stroke-oar, ‘and
-a very good psalm.’
-
-Our solemn moods seldom lasted long. Howbeit, I was sunk in musing.
-The grave and solemn season of a tranquil night invokes like
-thoughts. I looked at our muffled oars, and thought how, darkling,
-we skulked upon the water, watching for our prey; and, as I mused,
-I could not help hearing, as it were, in my ears, the echo of a
-hollow sing-song voice, the utterance of that good man, but somewhat
-wearisome preacher, the Rev. Michael Wylieson, of Kirk Leslie, in
-Fife, who loved to take for his text the verse which speaks of a
-certain coming, as like unto the coming of a thief in the night. But
-all this lasted only for a minute; I started up, crying—
-
-‘Pull, my men, pull—we’ve come to seek a rich galleon, and not to
-list the droning of chests full of whistles.’
-
-And so we stole cautiously on, until there rose, cutting the starry
-skies ahead of us, the tall masts of several ships of price. Which
-of these was the patache? We gazed and whispered, and while we
-whispered, there suddenly rose, as it seemed from the water, not
-a score fathoms ahead of us, a loud voice singing, in the Spanish
-language, and presently we discovered a small dark object, like a
-canoe, very low in the water, with the form of one man on board. As
-we gazed, the figure moved and turned; then appearing to observe the
-boat, the man stopped in his song, and bursting into a laugh, so that
-one could discern he was a negro, called out to us in bad Spanish,—
-
-‘You may as good go home to your hammocks, the pisareros (that is a
-kind of fish) will not bite till the tide turn, or the moon rises.’
-
-‘All is well, he suspects nothing,’ I whispered; ‘let us make sure
-of him.’ And so, as my comrades bent to their oars, I replied with a
-sort of imitation of the song which the fisherman, for such he was,
-had been singing, and at which he laughed again in his peculiar
-manner. But his mirth did not last long. Just as the shallop came
-with somewhat of a rude surge against the canoe, a couple of muscular
-hands grasped the poor negro by neck and arm, while I said in
-Spanish,—
-
-‘Not a cry—not a sound—if you value your life.’
-
-Immediately the poor man was pulled—all trembling and gasping in
-his bewilderment—into our boat, where he sat in the bottom, his
-white teeth chattering, and his eyes gleaming and rolling, while he
-sputtered out broken prayers in mingled Spanish and Latin.
-
-‘Now,’ said I, still speaking the former language, ‘answer truly what
-is asked of you, and you shall come to no harm; but if you try to
-deal falsely by us, your blood be on your own head.’
-
-At this the poor fellow gasped out, that he would do anything, if we
-would spare his life. I then questioned him concerning the galleon,
-or treasure-ship, and he answered very readily that she was in the
-harbour, being one of the vessels before us; that her freight was
-well nigh aboard, and that she would sail in two days at farthest.
-This was good news, and we hugged ourselves on our luck.
-
-‘Then they are not afraid of French or English adventurers in these
-seas?’ I said.
-
-‘Surely not,’ answered the negro. ‘For a fleet of armadilloes hath
-swept, as they think, the pirates clear away. So they conclude to set
-out on the voyage to Old Spain without more ado.’
-
-Having said this much, the negro appeared to bethink himself—and
-bursting into great lamentations—besought us never to reveal that we
-had heard aught from him; ‘otherwise,’ quoth he, ‘there is no death
-so cruel my master would not put me to.’
-
-But we bade him to be of good cheer, seeing that now his masters were
-altogether changed, and he was in the service of brave privateersmen,
-instead of skulking Spaniards; but that, indeed, if he proved a
-gallant trustworthy fellow, and would give us all the information he
-could, he was no man’s slave but his own master. On this he plucked
-up a little, and said that if it would be a satisfaction to us, we
-could row close up to the galleon, and view her, as the Spaniards,
-being in fancied security, kept but slack watch; and, indeed, the
-greater part of the crew had gone to the cathedral on the hill, to a
-great High Mass. This was just what we wanted, but first there was a
-small job to be done. Whispering to Radley, we grasped the gunwale of
-the canoe, and by a vigorous push, surged the light shell-like thing
-fairly bottom upwards.
-
-The negro looked on in consternation. ‘Why do you do that?’ he said,
-at length.
-
-‘Look you, Pedro,’ for such was his name: ‘Look you, Pedro,’ says
-I, ‘suppose both you and your boat disappear—what will your master
-think to-morrow morning? a cockle-shell made of bark like that will
-not sink, therefore you could not have foundered. A hurricane has not
-carried you out to sea, because neither has there been, nor is there
-likely to be, any hurricane—ergo, both boat and man have been somehow
-spirited away. Such being the case, there must be enemies—pirates
-you call them—on the coast; and there being pirates on the coast, it
-would be mighty rash for the good galleon to sail. But then, Pedro,
-when your worthy master sees the canoe bottom-upward, tumbled by
-the surf upon the beach, the case will be different. An accident
-has happened,’ he will say, “My poor Pedro, so faithful a slave,
-and so profitable a fisherman, hath somehow, in his zeal to catch
-pisareros, doubtless, overbalanced himself, and capsized this light
-canoe. Woe is me, Pedro sleeps among sea-weed.” But Pedro sleeping
-among sea-weed will not prevent the anchors of the galleon from being
-lifted to her bows—you see.’
-
-At this the poor fellow, understanding the device, looked up
-pitifully in my face—
-
-‘I have a wife,’ quoth he, ‘and she will also think——’ Here his voice
-failed him, and the honest creature began to whimper.
-
-‘Come—come,’ I broke in: ‘you may go back to your wife, Quashy, if
-you like, after we have the galleon, but till then you are one of
-us.’ I think the negro had sense to see, that whining would not make
-his case any the better, for he dried up his eyes, and pointing
-ahead, told us, that the ship riding nearest the shore was the
-galleon.
-
-Slowly and cautiously we rowed, describing a great circle round to
-seaward, so as to keep out of the way of the outermost ships. Their
-lights fell in long rays across the water, and we could hear the
-voices of the men aboard as they talked. Once we were hailed, and
-I ordered Pedro to reply—saying we were fishermen returning from
-catching pisareros, to have them ready for the early market—but
-no one offered to interrupt us, until the shallop floated in the
-shadow of the great carved quarter galleries of the galleon. The
-ship appeared well nigh deserted. The lap of the water against her
-sides, and the cheep of the rudder, as it moved a little way to and
-fro in the calm, were all the sounds about her. Had there been but
-a slight puff of wind from the shore we might have cut her cable,
-boarded her, and fairly carried her away; but in a calm such an
-enterprise was out of the question. So, we were preparing to push
-off, well satisfied with our reconnoitring, when a light suddenly
-fell upon the carved figure of a saint, which formed one of the stern
-ornaments, and at the same time I could hear, though faintly, men’s
-voices in conversation. It would appear that some one had entered
-the great cabin with a light, and one of the windows being open,
-advertised us of the circumstance. All at once it occurred to me
-that, if I heard somewhat of the conversation, it was just possible
-that I might pick up some information as to the exact time the ship
-would sail, and the exact track she would follow; or perhaps the
-vision of a rope left carelessly dangling from the quarter into the
-water, had something to do with the notion. Catching the cord, I
-found it firmly attached above, and so, communicating in a whisper
-to the crew of the shallop my intention, I swung myself up, and
-presently gained footing amid the great masses of carved work, being
-wreaths and coronals of flowers, and graven figures and symbols of
-war and peace, with which the Spaniards overload the sterns of their
-ships, going to great cost for little utility; and then a slight
-further exertion brought me into a gallery running round the great
-cabin, and fenced in with a sort of massive and curiously wrought and
-fretted railing. Then, crouching down, I crept to the window from
-whence came the voices and the light. There was a carved saint very
-handy, close by the casement, and favoured by his wooden holiness,
-I looked securely into the cabin. It was very brave in its devices
-and ornaments, and spacious in size. The ceiling was gilded until it
-glittered again in the light of the great silver lamp which swung
-above the table, and draperies and hangings of silk, all embroidered
-and passamented with gold lace, depended both from starboard and
-larboard, showing strangely beside the great ponderous breeches, and
-the strong tackle of two cannons, which you might see peeping from
-amid the silken bravery. The mizen-mast passed through this great
-cabin, and it was incrusted as it were with small weapons—pistols
-and daggers, most richly mounted and hilted—while below was a great
-buffet, all set out with glimmering crystal and plate—flagons and
-vases of burnished silver, and curiously-shaped goblets of sparkling
-glass. But, although I had never seen such splendour on board ship,
-or indeed, for that matter, anywhere else, I gazed with the greatest
-interest on the two men who occupied this floating palace; they sat
-on either side of the table, with a great crystal bottle, almost full
-of wine, and two long-stemmed glasses, before them. One was rather
-old and fat, with dark garments and grey grizzled hair. He had little
-pig-like eyes, and a sly greasy-looking face, and was altogether not
-pleasant to look on. But his companion was a handsome gaillard, as
-you might see in a summer’s day, and most bravely dressed. He had
-a very bronzed face, with jet-black moustaches, which were curled,
-and oiled, and crisped; and hair flowing about his shoulders in
-such dainty fashion as I warrant you cost the barber many an hour’s
-labour; his eye was bright and flashing; his nose and mouth well cut;
-and, altogether, his head would have been a fortune for a painter to
-copy, only there was a leer about the eye, and a curl about the lip,
-which gave the lie to whoso would say, ‘Here be a gentle cavalier.’
-Round his neck he wore great masses of lace, among which precious
-stones glittered; his cloak was of the richest velvet; and the arm
-which he stretched out to hold the drinking glass, showed a hand
-daintily gloved and sparkling with rings. On the table before him lay
-a rapier, sheathed and ornamented with ribbons, and beside it was a
-great straw hat, or sombrero, looped up with floss of gold and silk.
-
-‘I would I were to see Madrid as soon as you,’ said the young
-cavalier; ‘there is a balcony I would fain be under but now with a
-mandoline,’ and, so saying, he set himself to hum, making as though
-he were playing an instrument.
-
-‘Truly, Don José,’ answered the other, with a grating voice, ‘there
-are balconies enough in Carthagena, rivals enough to be fought with,
-and husbands enough to be deceived.’
-
-‘Pshaw,’ said Don José, ‘colonial conquests give a man as little
-credit as trouble. I warrant you, you would have me—as successful a
-gallant as any at the court, be the second who he may,’ and here my
-gentleman curled his moustaches, and leant back with an air of mighty
-complacency,—‘you would have me waste time and incense on the female
-savages of this pestilent corner of the world.’
-
-‘Well,’ answered the old man, ‘you ought to have bridled your valour,
-and not have drawn upon a gentleman in waiting in the precincts
-of the Escurial. You have no one to blame for your banishment but
-yourself. Zounds, for one, court-bred as you are, and a most learned
-doctor in that grave science of etiquette which rules the king who
-rules the double empire of Old and New Spain,—you showed yourself a
-singular pattern of discretion.’
-
-‘Who could help it, most grave and tricksy Senor Davosa?’ said the
-other; ‘what blood of Old Castile would not have boiled over to
-hear an upstart, who knows not the name of his grandfather, dispute
-precedence with me—an Hidalgo of fifteen pure and unblemished
-descents? By my faith—if I had any—were the guards not all the
-quicker, the mushroom would speedily have been cropped from the
-earth, and that, by this very piece of steel,’ and the speaker
-touched his rapier.
-
-‘Well,’ answered the other, ‘I hope such are not the terms of the
-memorial I am to carry home for you; if they be, I am likely to have
-but a bootless errand.’
-
-‘Fear nothing, man; fear nothing,’ cried Don José; ‘I know what
-belongs to a memorial—I know how to tickle the ears of a king. The
-parchment but sets forth in words that would move the mainmast of
-this floating-box, which you merchants and seafaring people call
-ship, my frenzied groupings and stumblings in this outer darkness,
-where no sun of royalty shines to cheer or warm my forlorn spirit.
-There are excellent phrases, man, excellent phrases in the thing;
-until I invented them I never thought I had been so ill used. When I
-read my own composition it affected me to tears—to tears, Davosa—as I
-hope it will the king. And now, when do you sail? Be speedy, my good
-dove, be speedy, and bring me back an olive branch as a sign that the
-waters are abated.’
-
-‘We count to weigh anchor to-morrow evening,’ replied the old
-merchant. ‘The freight was long of coming, the mules here being but
-slow-footed, otherwise we should scarce have tarried so long. Every
-day brings more and more risk of these accursed pirates, French and
-English, who so often mar our best ventures.’
-
-‘What! fearful, after the last pair of candlesticks you have bestowed
-on yonder lady, in her house upon the hill?’
-
-‘Blaspheme not holy things,’ interposed the older man.
-
-‘Oh, I cry thee pardon, good Gull,’ replied the other; ‘I forgot
-me you had as big a swallow as the rest. Ah, yes, to be sure, Our
-Lady of the Hill! Verily, a valorous and a venturesome dame. It
-was a brave device of señors the canons, that last miracle; a most
-surpassing feat, truly. Here is a blessed image of the blessed
-Virgin, dressed out as never was doll before; petticoats of cloth
-of gold, I warrant me, and stiff, absolutely stiff, with diamonds,
-pearls, rubies, and what not. Well! here comes an English man-of-war
-into these seas—the “Oxford,” I think, they call her. Bah! how
-these barbarous names stick in a gentleman’s throat; and so, by
-misadventure, this man-of-war, this heretical “Ox—Ox—Oxford,” taking
-fire, no doubt by reason of sparks from—from purgatory, to say
-the very least of it—this man-of-war blowing up, what say señors
-the canons? Down rush they from the shrine, all through the city,
-clamouring, “A miracle! A miracle!” Straightway the most greasy and
-gullible mob throng to the sanctuary—and what see they there? The
-Virgin, the doll, that is, in its place behind the altar, but all
-bemudded, all bedraggled, her gay clothes drenched with salt water,
-the gold embroidery torn away in flakes, the diamonds, and pearls,
-and rubies, all dropped and gone from stomacher and skirt; in fact, a
-very mutilated memorial of her yesterday’s glory. Great ejaculations
-of surprise and consternation! Mighty invocations to every saint
-in and out of the calendar! Evidently, a most dread secret, a most
-mighty mystery—a matter of holy wonder to the faithful!’
-
-‘Don José! Don José!’ interrupted the old man, who had listened very
-impatiently to this tirade; ‘the tongue is an unruly member. Take
-heed what you utter. The holy office hath ears which hear afar, and
-hands which smite afar. Who knows who may be even now listening to
-you? For my part I would not breathe to myself what you have spoken
-aloud, even were I alone in a boat fivescore miles from land.’
-
-‘Good Señor Davosa, it is no more your vocation to be fearless,
-than it is mine to be cowardly,’ replied the brisk gallant. ‘The
-cobwebs of the holy office were spun to catch blue bottles, man, not
-hornets. But I must tell you the story out. It is true, man, true,
-every word of it, as the bills of lading you send with this galleon.
-The people, then, wondered and worshipped, but could make nothing
-of the matter. Not so the canons. By the soul of the Cid, but they
-are dexterous fellows, the holy canons, and they caught the clue to
-the secret in brief time.’ “See you, my brethren,” said the head of
-the black cassocked brigands, “see you here. An heretical, a very
-heretical and damnable ship, called the ‘Oxford,’ hath been clean
-destroyed by fire, kindled no one knows how. Immediately after,
-coming to say our early prayers, what find we? This sacred effigy
-bedraggled and besmirched, as you see. How came this so? My brethren,
-the thing shall be clear unto you. The burning of the ‘Oxford’ is a
-very apparent and notable miracle. It was Our Lady’s hand held the
-torch. In the darkness of the night, when no eye saw it, she left her
-shrine. Many a league hath she walked over land and sea; as, indeed,
-the state of her garments may well make clear unto you all. Doubtless
-she hath scaled great mountains, and crested great waves, going with
-speed, so as to return by daylight to this her temple. The proof
-is very clear. The ‘Oxford’ hath perished; Our Lady hath spoiled
-her clothes; therefore hath Our Lady clean destroyed the ‘Oxford.’”
-And so, “Ave Maria Purissima,” shout the crowd, grovelling in their
-credulity. But the best—the very cream of the joke is behind—good
-Davosa, as thou shalt hear. “Good brethren and faithful,” quoth the
-chief canon again, “it seemeth clear unto me, that after such a
-miracle wrought in our favour, the least we can do—I mean you can
-do—is to restore the gold, and the diamonds, and the pearls, and
-the rubies, thus spoiled and lost by our good Lady. And look ye, it
-may well be that you shall thus be clear gainers; for if our Lady
-had not destroyed the ‘Oxford,’ mayhap the ‘Oxford’ would have
-destroyed Carthagena, and thus would you have been all clean ruined
-and undone.” So, “Gloria in Excelsis,” again shouted the poor fleeced
-mob; and the image is to have new jewels, and the canons to have the
-old ones, as well they deserved them for their ingenuity.’
-
-And so saying, Don José drank off a full glass of wine, and leaned
-back, laughing lustily. His comrade arose—
-
-‘That I have listened thus long to you, Don José,’ he said, ‘you
-owe to personal courtesy, not to any sympathy with your heathenish
-spirit, so full of unbelief and mockery. Have you any further
-commands?’
-
-‘No: none—none,’ answered the cavalier, still laughing. ‘But thou
-knowest, Davosa, that in your heart, man—at the bottom of that cold
-deep well you call a heart—you are laughing with me in very cordial
-merriment.’
-
-The old man rose up. ‘If you have no further commands,’ he was
-beginning, when Don José, who had got upon his feet, and was assuming
-his rapier and sombrero, while he repeated—‘No—none at all,’ suddenly
-stopped, and said, laughingly—
-
-‘Hold—yes, one. You have heard of Don Octavio y St. Jago—every duenna
-in Madrid knows him to her cost. Well, he and I are close friends;
-I have writ to him. The letter is in the packet you hold; but one
-material circumstance I have forgotten. It is an old paction between
-us, that each should inform the other of all his love passages, so
-that, as it were, we should mutually act as spurs to each other’s
-gallantry, and so keep up our reputation.’
-
-The merchant at this shrugged up his shoulders. ‘But,’ quoth he, ‘I
-thought you deemed the ladies on this side the great ocean no better
-than savages.’
-
-‘Well, well, my good Davosa, and, if I did, know you not that
-there may be, for once in a way, a certain savour and tastiness
-about savagedom which speaks to the palate? Look you, the man
-palled with nectarines and peaches may well pluck a bramble as he
-loiters in the field. And so, pray find means to inform my friend
-that there dwelleth in Carthagena a very ripe, and not altogether
-untempting bramble, having the shape of a very innocent-hearted
-and simple-souled damsel, who having rejected one or more of my
-courtesies, put me in the mind to tame and humble her completely;
-that unto this end I have gained over her mother, who is a widow and
-also a fool, believing very firmly in the saints, and a great number
-of other phenomena, myself among the number; and that—that—in fact
-I shall impart to him the conclusion of the tale when we meet at
-Madrid.’
-
-The old man drily promised to observe the message, and then both
-drunk to the success of the voyage.
-
-‘To-morrow evening, then, you turn your faces eastward?’ said the
-cavalier.
-
-‘If there be but a breath to clear us of the land, I trust we may say
-our vespers at sea,’ replied the merchant.
-
-‘And if there be but that same breeze,’ I whispered to myself, ‘you
-may chance say your matins aboard the Will-o’-the-Wisp.’
-
-Then as the couple walked towards the cabin-stairs, I lowered myself
-into the shallop in safety, whispering to my comrades the good news I
-had overheard. They could scarce refrain from shouting, but caution
-overmastering joy, we pulled swiftly away. To some degree, however,
-our good fortune had made us bold, and instead of rowing out straight
-to sea, we made for the principal cluster of ships, as they lay in
-the line of our progress towards the schooner. We had passed several,
-when we suddenly heard the dash of several oars, vigorously pulled,
-close aheap.
-
-‘Santa Maria!’ cried the negro, springing up, for he was terribly
-frightened at being found with us, ‘Santa Maria—the guard-boat!’
-
-And, true enough, just round the bows of a large tartan came a
-great launch, impelled by six oarsmen, and with a glitter of arms
-and lanterns shining out of her. Well, we had hardly time to gasp,
-when, with a great clamour at our sudden appearance, and all her
-crew starting up from their oars, the Spanish boat ran right into
-the starboard quarter of the shallop, hitting us a blow, which well
-nigh swamped the light craft; the Spaniards roaring out to curse
-our stupidity in not having got out of the way. For all this, we
-might have got clear off, they taking us, in the dark and confusion,
-for one of their own boats, had not Simon Radley shouted out
-involuntarily a great oath, cursing them for clumsy Spanish thieves,
-that knew not where they rowed. At this, a Spaniard aboard, who, it
-seems, knew the sound of our language, cried out—‘Los Ingleses—los
-Ingleses!’ and straightway our enemies, yelling and screeching like
-madmen, jumped up with intent to board us. Half-a-dozen pistol shots
-went off in a minute, as I shouted to my small crew to pull for their
-lives, and the boat started forward, scraping past the oars of the
-launch. Just then we gave a loud hurrah, as Englishmen love to do, to
-show their mettle. The bowman of the Spanish boat made a desperate
-leap, alighting with a surge on the stern of our shallop. Even while
-he was in the air, I started up to grapple with him. Our arms grasped
-each other’s doublets. I felt his hot breath on my cheek. We stood
-erect but for a moment, twining, as it were, around each other’s
-limbs, and then both of us, linked with brawny muscles together, fell
-splash into the sea, amid a great shout, which mingled in my ears
-with the rushing and gurgling of the water, into which we plunged.
-For a brief space I thought we must be drowned together, so desperate
-was the clutch with which we clung round each other’s throats; but
-rising in a minute to the surface, I found myself amid the blades of
-the Spanish oars, and, so clinging to them, I fought with my foeman,
-seeking to cast off his grip. At the same time I looked about for
-the shallop, but she was not to be seen, having evidently got off
-clear. And so, when the Spaniards grasped me to haul me into their
-boat, I fought and struggled desperately, that the shallop might have
-the greater start, in case they pursued her. At length, however,
-being mastered, I was dragged into the guard-boat, just as, half
-an hour before, the negro was dragged aboard the shallop, and cast
-violently down on my face in the stern sheets, while my hands were
-fastened behind me. This done, one of my captors gave me a kick,
-and told me to sit up, which I did, in the centre of a circle of
-ferocious-looking sailors and soldiers, who all began to question
-me at once, with the most savage oaths and curses; to all of which
-I replied never a word, but shook my head, as though quite ignorant
-of the language. So presently, the officer in command, thinking, no
-doubt, that it might be so, ordered silence, and then saying that
-it was useless to chase the small boat in the dark, and that the
-prisoner must be taken ashore, and given up to the alcaide, bade his
-men stretch to their oars, which they did; and, presently, passing
-close by the galleon, my old friend Davosa called out to know what
-was the matter. The officer who steered answered, that they had come
-upon an English boat lurking in the harbour, and had captured one of
-her crew, and that he suspected there were more of the rogues not far
-off. Then presently, coming to a quay or jetty, they forced me up the
-slippery steps, and being guarded by two soldiers, each with a drawn
-sword they marched me away.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XX.
-
-I AM TRIED AND TORTURED BY THE SPANIARDS.
-
-
-My heart was sad enough and heavy enough, I warrant the reader, as
-I turned my back upon the sea, and toiled through the dry hot sand
-of the beach, followed by a group of the boat’s crew. There was no
-one stirring in the town, only we heard the echo of songs, and the
-jingle of glasses, from taverns or posadas, where drunken sailors
-were carousing. Presently we passed through several very narrow
-streets, not savoury by any means; for rotting garbage lay thick and
-foul around, and overhead the far-projecting eaves, almost meeting
-each other, seemed to have been built so as to keep the stenches
-the better in. Once I heard the twangle of a guitar, or some such
-instrument. This was as we passed a house, nearly hidden in orange
-and other trees, and situated in a retired corner of an open space
-amid gardens; and, looking for the musician, I saw beneath a balcony
-the slender form of a young man, of just such a size and shape as my
-gay cavalier Don José—that is to say, so well as I could judge in
-the light of the newly-risen moon. But I had other fish to fry than
-to attend to his love-making; for, to tell the truth, I felt by no
-means certain that I would not be hanged for a spy. All the stories
-of Spanish cruelty I had ever heard—and they were not a few—came up
-into my head; and I think, when I called to mind the tortures they
-ofttimes put their prisoners to, in order to make them reveal what
-they knew of their comrades’ designs, I felt a greater sinking of
-heart than even the idea of the halter gave me. But, notwithstanding,
-my good Scots blood was but for a minute chilled; and then it rushed
-with fiery force through all my veins, and involuntarily I raised my
-voice, and made oath by all I worshipped, and all I loved, that they
-might wrench my limbs out of me ere they got a word to their purpose.
-
-‘What does the rogue say?’ inquired the lieutenant, for such he was
-who walked behind. My sentinels answered that I spoke somewhat in
-an outlandish gibberish they could not understand; and presently,
-seizing me by each shoulder, they turned down a great arched gateway,
-beneath a long straggling house, with pillars in the front, and a
-flag over the roof. Here were sentries, who challenged our party and
-received the countersign, and then we entered a large bare room on
-the ground floor, which was dimly lighted by but one lantern, placed
-at a desk, where a soldier, whom I judged to be a sergeant, was
-writing. Along the sides of this room ran a slanting ledge of wooden
-boards, on which hard bed full a score of soldiers lay sleeping in
-their _ponchos_, or loose cloaks.
-
-‘What springald have we here?’ said the sergeant, rising from his
-writing, and flinging the full light of the lantern, which did not
-cause any very great illumination, over me, as I stood, somewhat
-pale, I daresay, and all dripping from my bath. But just at that
-moment the lieutenant, who was my captor, entering, the sergeant
-saluted after military fashion, and despatching one of his men, the
-officer on duty presently walked in, having his uniform doublet
-unbuttoned, and a silk napkin tied round his head, as though he had
-been roused from an after-supper’s nap.
-
-The officers made each other very ceremonious bows, and then he of
-the sea delivered me formally up to he of the land, as a person
-unable or unwilling to give any account of myself, and captured
-from a strange boat in the harbour, one of the crew of which, at
-all event, spoke English. The word made quite a sensation in the
-guardroom. The half-waking soldiers rolled off their benches, and
-came scowling and muttering about—the sergeant, bestirring himself,
-went to his desk, and from a clash of iron there I concluded, and
-justly, that he was selecting his heaviest pair of handcuffs—and the
-officer with the napkin round his head, who did not appear altogether
-sober, crossed himself very religiously, and, cursing me for a
-damnable heretic, ordered the men back, telling them that they would
-see me much better when I came to be hanged. He then demanded whether
-I understood any Spanish? to which interrogatory, as I had previously
-determined, I replied that I did a little; and then, to their great
-astonishment, I asked very fiercely whether Great Britain and Spain
-were at war, that an English mariner was to be dragged out of his
-boat while giving offence to none, forcibly bound, and taken to a
-Spanish watch-house.
-
-‘_Madre de Dios_—here’s a goodly crowing,’ cried the officer of the
-watch; ‘why, thou pernicious heretic and contemner of saints, thou
-buccaneering and piratical rogue, for such I see thee with half an
-eye, what business hast thou or any of thy pestilent countrymen to
-sail these seas, which belong to His Most Catholic Majesty, the seas
-of the Spanish Indies? I tell thee thou shalt be hanged, were it
-for nothing else but rousing me from a comfortable doze; therefore,
-bethink thee of thy sins, and that the more speedily, inasmuch as
-their catalogue is, doubtless, long, and thy time as surely short.’
-
-Having made this speech, the gentleman staggered slightly, and then,
-recovering himself, looked round as if to say, ‘Who suspects that I
-have taken too much to drink? if there be any, let him stand forth
-and say so;’ then, shaking his head very gravely, he observed that
-the world was getting wickeder every day, and added that he was much
-concerned thereat. Here the sea lieutenant, as fearing a scandal,
-broke in, and suggested that I should be at once taken before the
-alcaide; but the sergeant, assuring him that that was out of the
-question, inasmuch as his honour was then supping with his reverence,
-the chief canon, and that, above all things, his honour disliked to
-be disturbed at meal times—the captain of the guard interposed, and,
-swearing that he respected the peculiarity of the alcaide, it being,
-indeed, one in which he confessed himself a sharer, ordered the
-sergeant to lock me carefully up until the morning, and to give me
-the dirtiest cell and the heaviest irons, in honour of the Catholic
-religion. Then, addressing me again, he said that I might make myself
-easy, for he saw the gallows in my face; and so, taking the arm of
-the naval lieutenant, he swaggered out. The sergeant then approached,
-holding the irons; these consisted simply of two rings for the
-wrists, connected by a chain about six inches long. There was no use
-in resisting; so the cold, greasy-feeling metal speedily enclasped my
-wrists, each ring locking with a smart snap.
-
-‘How came it that your comrades deserted you, friend?’ quoth the
-sergeant, in rather an amicable tone.
-
-‘I will tell you nothing about my comrades,’ I replied; ‘I do not
-want to be uncourteous, but you shall hear nothing from me on that
-score.’
-
-‘Hum!’ said the sergeant, ‘that is but a bad tone to take. We shall
-see about that to-morrow. However, the thing is your own business,
-not mine; so come along, and if you are used to lying hard, you can
-sleep upon it.’
-
-I followed my jailer, who really was not an uncivil man, through
-several long passages, with great doors, studded like the doors of
-tolbooths, with iron nails. The lantern cast a dim fickle glare in
-these hot airless passages, and the cockroaches went whirring along,
-dashing their horny bodies and buzzing wings against the glass
-covering the light, and in our faces.
-
-‘Here is your quarters, my Buccaneer,’ said the sergeant, stopping
-at a door nail-studded like the rest, and marked No. 15. ‘There are
-worse rooms in the place, so you have to thank me for this. Your
-countrymen are not always so civil when we fall into their clutches.’
-
-I hastened to assure him that he was quite mistaken in that matter,
-but he cut me short, and, unlocking the door, made a sign for me
-to enter, saying that there was a chair on which I could sleep if
-I had a mind. Then he locked the heavy door behind me with a great
-clang and crash, and shot two or three bolts, after which I heard
-his footsteps die away as he walked back to the guard-room. The
-cell or dungeon in which I was confined was a narrow, bare room;
-the door paved with flagstones and very filthy. This I ascertained
-by the first step I took. I felt the walls; they were composed of
-large roughly hewn stones, very strong and dungeon-like. Up in one
-corner, close to the roof, and almost ten feet from the floor, was a
-small window, barred with iron. Through this a ray of bluish-tinted
-moonlight streamed down, and showed me the chair which the sergeant
-spoke of. I dragged it into a corner, and sitting down with a heavy
-heart, I began, for the first time since I was taken, to meditate on
-my situation. I had never before sat a prisoner in a jail, and the
-gyves felt sad and strange upon my wrists. How silent, and dismal,
-and hot, the place was! what a change from the breezy deck and the
-clattering voices aboard the ’Will-o’-the-Wisp.’ I listened and
-listened until I almost thought I could distinguish the deep hoarse
-tones of Stout Jem and Nicky Hamstring’s cheering laugh. Was I ever
-to see them again? I had my doubts of it. For the present, at all
-events, our enterprise was balked. The Spaniards would doubtless send
-out a squadron of their armadilloes. The schooner would be forced to
-leave the coast, and when or where, even supposing I was to get scot
-free out of the hands of my present jailers, I could meet her again,
-was but a discouraging question to put to myself. To-morrow I was to
-appear before the alcaide, and perhaps his court was but a stage on
-the way to the gallows. To be strung up and choked at the end of a
-rope—faugh! why did I not die upon a bloody deck, amid the thunder of
-our guns, and with the anthem of my comrades’ cheers ringing through
-my brain? Or, why was I not to take up my rest like my father before
-me in the sea, which was my home, swept over by a stifling wave in
-some wild mid-watch, or calmly sinking with the sinking ship? These
-were not pleasant subjects to ponder on, but they would flow into my
-head as water drains into a leaky vessel. I tried hard, but vainly,
-to keep them out. I tried to sing a jolly sea song I had often heard
-my comrades chant most lustily:
-
- “Aloof! and aloof! and steady I steer,
- ’Tis a boat to our wish,
- And she slides like a fish,
- When cheerily stemm’d and when you row clear!
- She now has her trim,
- Away let her swim.
- Mackerels are swift i’ the shine of the moon!
- And herrings in gales when they wind us,
- But timing our oars, so smoothly we run,
- That we leave them in shoals behind us—
- Then cry one and all!
- Amain! for Whitehall!
- The Diegos we’ll board to rummage their hold,
- And drawing our steel, they must draw out their gold.”
-
-The first verse of this song, called ‘Sir Francis Drake’s Triumph,’
-I got through. In the first line of the second my voice choked as
-though there were churchyard dust in my throat. I got up and walked
-to and fro in the cell. Through the window I could see the little
-square patch of blue sky, dotted as full of stars as the door behind
-me was full of nail-heads. Through the opening there floated the rich
-smell of flowers and herbs wetted with the cooling dews of the night.
-There was a garden, belonging, probably, to the alcaide, or governor,
-behind my prison. I tried, why, I know not, perhaps my nervous
-restlessness impelled me, to clamber up and look out, but my fettered
-hands forbade. So, at length, thinking it wisest to attempt to
-compose myself to sleep, I flung me down on the bench, and though the
-chill of my wet clothes sent shudderings through me, I at length fell
-off into a disturbed doze, dreaming confused and frightful visions,
-which every now and then woke me up with a great start.
-
-In the morning I had some bread, stock-fish, and water for breakfast,
-and was thereafter conducted before his worship the alcaide. The
-chamber which was his court was a barely-furnished room, with a dais,
-or raised step, on which was placed a long table. Behind it stood a
-comfortable leather chair—the throne of justice. On one side of the
-table there was a desk all strewed with papers, where sat the clerk.
-There was no bar for the accused, who simply stood in the centre of
-the floor, surrounded by his guards or jailers, while a few benches
-round the walls furnished accommodation for the spectators. When
-I entered, the alcaide seemed just to have taken his seat. He was
-a burly, morose man; his swarthy face all torn and seamed by the
-smallpox, and a blue scar rising up from one of his black bristling
-eyebrows. He had great gold earrings, and his thick brown fingers
-were gemmed with rings. The clerk, who sat near, next attracted my
-notice. He was an old little man, and all his lean weasen face was
-one pucker of wrinkles, out of which gleamed two greenish eyes,
-sparkling like those of the ferret, as the creature fixes its long
-front teeth in the jugular artery of its prey. As I gazed upon the
-aspect of my judge, and his counsellor and assistant, I felt my
-hopes of life and liberty oozing out of me at every pore. Two more
-ill-looking gentlemen you might not find in a long day’s search.
-The court was tolerably well filled with spectators, for the news
-of an English pirate, as they called me, captured in the harbour,
-had spread like wildfire, and I found myself the centre of a thick
-mass of swarthy faces, and black gleaming eyes, and long curling
-jet-black moustaches. The officer of the boat which had captured me,
-was placed, out of compliment to his quality, upon a chair near the
-judge, and close by him sat the military gentleman who had been so
-certain of my being hanged when delivered to him over-night. This man
-had very bloodshot eyes, and a fierce look; indeed, he seemed made
-of the same kidney as the alcaide, to whom he frequently whispered,
-in a hoarse, husky voice. The sergeant or the soldiers I did not see
-at all. My jailers were mere ordinary turnkey-looking fellows, not
-rougher or more brutal than most of their class. Just before the
-proceedings commenced, who should enter but my old acquaintance,
-for such I considered him, Don José! He made his way through the
-crowd very cavalierly, and ascending the dais, was welcomed by the
-dignitaries there, with whom he seemed tolerably well acquainted,
-and presently had a chair brought him, and talked and laughed gaily,
-until the alcaide hemming loudly, and settling himself in his seat,
-the old ferret-eyed clerk took up his pen, and the court was formally
-opened.
-
-‘Bring up the prisoner!’ said my judge, and I was moved forward
-nearly to the table.
-
-The clerk peered at me with his green eyes.
-
-‘I think the fellow is like one of the gang of that notorious thief
-and murderer, called Morgan. If so, the proceedings need not last
-long; the individual called Morgan, and all his band, being already
-many times condemned for murder, sacrilege, treason, and robbery
-committed by them on the high seas, in the islands, on the main, and
-elsewhere.’
-
-It was the clerk who spoke thus, in a thin squeak, like the cheeping
-of rusty iron.
-
-‘I said, when I saw him last night,’ added the army officer, ‘that
-there was gallows written in the heretic’s face.’
-
-‘Strong corroborative testimony that!’—said Don José, with a sneer,
-which he seemed not to think it worth the trouble to conceal. ‘Worthy
-alcaide, do you not think the case all but proved against the
-prisoner? My most astute friend, Lopez’—here he bowed to the clerk,
-who glanced back at him with wrathful eye,—‘and my warlike friend,
-Guzman’—here he indicated the scowling officer—‘seem inclined to save
-everybody, but the hangman, any trouble in the matter.’
-
-The alcaide, whose perceptions appeared none of the quickest, looked
-from one to the other of the speakers, with a grim smile, and then
-asked whether I could talk Spanish; I answered I could; and so the
-examination began. I told very truly my name and country; I said I
-was a mariner on board a schooner, sailing under British colours. I
-added, that I had been seized by an armed boat, and dragged out of my
-own; that the assault had been made upon me and my boat, that there
-was no law or justice for it, and that the Spaniards well knew.
-
-Now, although I took this tone, I was very well aware that it would
-serve me nothing. For, although England and Spain were at peace,
-yet so were never Englishmen or Spaniards to the south of the line;
-whichever fell into the other’s hands smarted for it; and that all of
-us knew right well, and I had made up my mind accordingly.
-
-‘Friend,’ quoth the spiteful clerk, ‘do not choke yourself with
-big words, insomuch as we shall presently save you the trouble by
-means of a gallows, which ever standeth in the court-yard, with a
-convenient rope.’
-
-‘I knew by his face it is what he would come to,’ replied Guzman.
-
-‘Truly, friend,’ said Don José, addressing him, ‘you have a very
-pretty knack at the telling of fortunes—much serving to encourage and
-support your fellow-creatures at a pinch.’
-
-‘Silence!’ proclaimed the alcaide, ‘the course of justice must not
-be interrupted.’ The little clerk made a bow, and Don José laughed
-outright.
-
-‘Why did you enter in your boat the harbour of Carthagena?’ the judge
-demanded.
-
-I said, that not recognising his authority to ask I should not answer
-the question.
-
-‘Take down,’ said the alcaide, ‘that he denies the authority of the
-king of Spain in this, his new empire.’
-
-The clerk obeyed, with a sort of joyful chuckle.
-
-‘On what voyage were you bound?’ I was next asked.
-
-I remained mute.
-
-‘We shall make him find his tongue presently,’ grinned the clerk;
-‘even though we should squeeze it out of his thumbs.’
-
-I guessed the meaning of this hint, but still held my peace.
-
-‘Where was your ship when you came into the harbour?—speak, sir!’
-thundered the alcaide, ‘or it will be the worse for you.’
-
-But I answered very quietly, but firmly, that these were matters on
-which he could not expect me to give him any satisfaction. At this
-the little ferret-eyed man grinned and rubbed his hands, after which
-he took down my answer, very formally.
-
-‘Dost thou know—thou heretical rogue—that the very shadow of the
-gallows is upon thee!’ cried the alcaide. ‘If thou valuest thy
-life, at the rate of a brass maravedi, make a clean breast of it.
-Confess—speak the designs of the pirates, thy comrades, and it may be
-that we will have pity on thy youth; and instead of cutting short thy
-days, send thee to labour for some lengthened space in the mines of
-Darien.’
-
-There was a pause after this alternative had been offered to me. Then
-I collected my thoughts and spoke thus:—
-
-‘I am in your power, and I can make no resistance to your will, but I
-pray the judge to consider whether he, a Spanish gentleman, being in
-the hands of his enemies, would feel that he did right in betraying
-staunch comrades for the sake of his own life. As to your threats, I
-fear them but little; I am of a race having stout hearts and tough
-sinews, and I tell you, Spaniards, that if I come to evil in your
-hands, there will be those left behind me, who will dearly wreak my
-death on all men of your nation, whom the fortune of war may fling
-into their hands. I speak this not in idle braggadocio; I am young,
-and it is hard for me to leave this world, in whom are many I love
-well; but I will not save my life by turning a traitor from fear.
-There have been Spaniards ere now in my power, and I let them go.
-They had not even to ask their lives—they were granted freely. We
-English and Scotch mariners love not to spill defenceless blood—we
-rather fight with swords and pikes than with halters. But if you be
-bent upon my death, I warn you again, that many a Spanish throat
-will bleed for it, ere the bark in which I was a mariner see Jamaica
-again.’
-
-I spoke this with a warm energy, which surprised myself, and a better
-flow of words than I thought I could muster in Spanish. Don José
-struck his hand upon the table as I finished, and cried vehemently
-out——
-
-‘Well said, by the soul of a Cid! Pedro-y-Monte, you must not hang
-this spark. It will do you no good, man. The youth hath a spirit, and
-bears himself boldly. Pedro, you must let the fellow go. What, man!
-he will not take Carthagena from you; I will insure that, although
-my warlike friend Guzman may not feel himself justified in saying so
-much, on behalf of his own valour.’
-
-The officer so alluded to, turned rapidly from red to white, and
-white to red. He mumbled and grumbled to himself, and then forced
-out somewhat about its being known; that he, a simple soldier, could
-not compete in word-sallies and figures of speech with so renowned a
-courtier as Don José. He was interrupted by the alcaide, who said
-that it was ever his pleasure to honour so honourable and great a
-gentleman as Don José; but here was a matter in which he but spoke
-the written words of the law, and these words said that the doom of
-pirates was death.
-
-‘Yes, I grant thee,’ exclaimed my unexpected advocate; ‘but is the
-youth a pirate? You go too fast, good Master Alcaide. Justice is
-blind; but you see more than there is to behold!’
-
-The alcaide, who evidently wished to keep well with Don José, and
-who as evidently wished to string me up, began to get very red in
-the face, and to mutter half-suppressed words of passion. Just then,
-the ferret-eyed man whispered him at one ear, while Captain Guzman
-possessed himself of the other. After listening for a few seconds,
-the judge seemed to decide what he should do; accordingly, he hemmed
-twice, and began in a loud pompous style—
-
-‘The court,’ he said, ‘hath been in an unseemly manner interrupted
-by a noble person now present. Such irregularities cannot in any way
-be permitted, even to the highest of the land; and it is therefore
-craved that the noble person in question do refrain henceforth from
-interrupting the course of justice.’
-
-Don José, at this laughed scornfully, and flung himself back in his
-chair, which he balanced upon the hinder legs, twisting and twirling
-his moustache at the same time, with the air of a man who deems
-his company vastly beneath him, and curling his lip as he did when
-relating the miracle of Our Lady of the Hill blowing up the ‘Oxford’
-man-of-war.
-
-The wrinkled man next took up the speech. Peering with the bitterest
-glances out of the corner of his blinking eyes at Don José, he
-squeaked out, that those suffering banishment for offences committed
-against the law, were not the most proper supporters of the authority
-of his Majesty.
-
-The hidalgo answered, by removing his sombrero, and bowing, with a
-wonderful air of mock gravity and condescension, to his reprover.
-Then the examination recommenced:
-
-‘Did you not arrive with your comrades off this peaceful coast in an
-armed ship, your intent being to kill, sink, burn, and destroy?’ the
-alcaide next demanded, with ruffled brow, and a savage eagerness in
-his speech.
-
-I remained mute. ‘Silence gives consent,’ said the clerk. Don José
-shrugged his shoulders, and leisurely used a golden pick-tooth. The
-clerk wrote down something, probably an entry, that I had confessed
-that such were our intentions.
-
-‘Were you not taken in the act of playing the spy in the harbour of
-Carthagena?’ roared the alcaide again.
-
-I still remained mute. What need was there of speech? The alcaide
-and the clerk consulted together; then the former made a sign to one
-of the turnkeys, who stood by me. The man nodded and withdrew. This
-motion did not escape Don José, who forthwith rose up, and said very
-briskly—
-
-‘Señor Monté, beware you do not somewhat transcend your commission.
-I have not lost my interest at the court of Castile. That youth may
-be a pirate, but you have in noways proved it. Besides he hath borne
-himself both modestly and manfully. I am of a house which hath ever
-protected the weak against the strong; and I swear, by your Lady of
-the Hill, that if the youth come to wrong, you and your underlings
-shall answer and abide the consequence!’
-
-At this, there was a loud and threatening murmur among the
-spectators; and the turnkeys, thinking that Don José might attempt
-a rescue single-handed, gripped me tightly. As for the alcaide, his
-grim and disfigured features grew white, and worked and grinned with
-spite, while the little wrinkled man, shaking with rage, whispered
-tremulously to his superior. In a minute the alcaide burst out. He
-started off his seat, and with his fists clenched, and the shaggy
-hairs of his moustache bristling for very passion, he roared out—
-
-‘A pretty thing—a pretty thing I that I am thus crossed and insulted
-in my own court; that my warnings and reproofs are set at naught, and
-I am threatened on the very judgment-seat! Caramba! Let those who do
-so look to it. Who dare come between me and—’
-
-‘And your prey, kite!’ said Don José, with the old bitter sneer
-gleaming on his face.
-
-The alcaide foamed at the mouth, and bellowed rather than spoke.
-
-‘The pirate—the pirate shall die the death! I say it! Here prevail no
-traitors’ counsels!’
-
-‘Whoso says I am a traitor,’ cried Don José, ‘lies in his foul
-throat, and I will push the words back into his lungs with my sword!’
-So saying, he advanced upon the judge.
-
-‘Guards—guards!’ screamed out the clerk. ‘Turn out the guards! Where
-are the soldiers? Treason! The life of the alcaide is in danger!’
-
-At the same time, the mob in the court, who had hitherto remained
-passive, burst into loud execrations, and clenched fists and gleaming
-knives were shaken at Don José. The latter drew himself up with that
-majestic motion and gesture, which your high-bred Spaniard knows how
-to assume, and curling his thin lip, and flashing his black eyes upon
-the roaring crowd, stood, unmoved as a stone statue in the aisle of a
-minster.
-
-Meantime, the alcaide entirely threw off all appearance of a judge’s
-impartiality.
-
-‘Townsmen!’ he shouted, ‘are we to be insulted, spit on, and because,
-forsooth, our contemner is a noble of Castile?—are we to cower as
-meek as flogged hounds before his highness? I say the fellow before
-us is a pirate. He is, at all events, an Englishman, which means the
-same thing. He is a heretic and a buccaneer-spy, and he shall strap
-for it. Holy Mother! shall we turn loose the rogue to prey upon our
-vitals? I hate him—I hate his race! they have spoiled great ventures
-of precious merchandise; they have captured ships I equipped; they
-have harried treasures I amassed; they pillage and harass our lawful
-trade; they intrude themselves on our coasts, and in our seas; they
-have burnt Panama; they have taken Nicaragua; they have taken Santa
-Maria; they have taken Gibraltar in Venezuela; they have raged and
-thirsted for our blood; they are the enemies of our faith, and of our
-nation; and so may my right hand wither, may my right arm wither from
-socket to wrist, but those of the murthering pirates who come within
-my grasp, shall go thieving no more! Said I well, townsmen—said I
-well?’
-
-This furious tirade was answered by a great shout from the people,
-who crowded round me, cursing and flashing their broad-bladed knives
-in my face. One fellow raised his arm to strike; I saw the swell of
-the moving muscles, and the glitter of the poised knife, when Don
-José, with one bound leaped from the dais, and scattering the crowd,
-as a charge of horse scatters broken infantry, he dashed up the arm
-raised to stab, and drawing his rapier, the mob fell back from him,
-while he shouted in tones which rung like trumpet-notes——
-
-‘Hounds that you are!—would you murder in cold blood an unarmed and
-manacled man?’
-
-There was dead silence for near a minute. ‘Alcaide of Carthagena,’
-continued my defender, ‘look well to yourself—what I have done, was
-that the ends of justice might be served, and I will answer for my
-acts. I can do no more—I leave this man in your hands—you shall be
-answerable for your treatment of him. Make way there, and permit me
-to go forth.’
-
-Again the mob yielded a passage. ‘He speaks like a king,’ said one
-fellow. ‘Truly, he hath the bearing of an emperor,’ murmured another.
-And so, still holding his unsheathed rapier in his hand, his features
-being calm and composed, save that there was on his forehead a slight
-flush, and a hot sparkle gleaming in his eye, he passed through the
-yielding crowd, who instinctively fell back before him—walking with
-the port of a conqueror, who enters a fallen city—this man—a banished
-libertine—but still a grandee in whose veins ran the haughty blood of
-Old Castile!
-
-As Don José disappeared, I felt that it was all over with me. His
-advocacy failing, I stood in a position much worse than before. I
-was the cause that a friendship, or at least an intimacy, had turned
-to a bitter enmity, and that the alcaide had been publicly insulted
-on the judgment-seat. Therefore, I tried to compose my mind, so as
-to withdraw it from things of the world, which already began to
-seem like matters in which others might have an interest, but which
-possessed none for me—like things, indeed, which were but dreamings,
-wherein, to him who stands upon the last step of life, is nought,
-save only deceitfulness and vanity. I was roused from this fit of
-musing by the harsh voice of the alcaide, who, having now recovered
-his composure, thought proper, perhaps, to smooth down somewhat of
-his last oration.
-
-‘Despite,’ quoth he, ‘despite the ill-advised attempt of a noble
-person, now gone forth, to bar the proceedings of this court, the
-prisoner may depend upon it he shall receive just judgment at our
-hands.’
-
-The clerk grinned to himself, and bowed to his master, who called
-upon him to read a decree of the court which it seems had just been
-written. It was to this effect:—
-
-‘The accused, a Scots mariner, by name Leonard Lindsay, a buccaneer,
-or pirate of the sort called Brethren of the Coast, unlawfully in
-arms against his Most Christian Majesty, having refused to answer
-certain interrogatories put to him in open court, it is decreed that
-his examination be continued in private.’
-
-By the hum which arose, and the broken words I could catch uttered
-around me, when this decree was read, I was presently aware of its
-real meaning. It signified interrogatory by torture. I clenched my
-teeth, and made a great effort to show no sign—not even by the tremor
-of a finger—of flinching. The turnkeys touched me on the shoulder,
-and I walked mechanically out between them. We passed through divers
-corridors, I taking but little notice, however, where we went, until
-we arrived in a bare chamber; here there was a heavy table of plain
-wood and one or two benches, but most part of the room was occupied
-with some machines or apparatus, the nature of which I guessed,
-but the forms whereof were concealed by a coarse linen cloth flung
-over them. This cloth was stained with patches of blood. Beside the
-table stood two men; one of them, a thin, mean-looking personage,
-poorly dressed in a worn doublet, with a cold passionless face and
-stony eyes. The other was portly and pleasant-looking, and seeing me
-advance, eyed me from head to foot, saying at the same time, ‘Hum! a
-goodly patient.’
-
-‘_El medico_,’ whispered one of my conductors. He had no cause to
-tell me of the profession of the doctor’s companion. Close behind me
-came the alcaide, his clerk, and the ruffianly captain. The naval
-gentleman was not there, and on the ferret-eyed man asking for him,
-an attendant said that senor, the lieutenant, had been sent for in
-haste from the harbour. Our group was now ranged in a circle, I being
-opposite to the alcaide, the executioner standing on one side of
-me, and the doctor on the other. The clerk carried an open book for
-writing in, and a turnkey beside him held the ink-bottle.
-
-‘Accused,’ said the alcaide, ‘do you still refuse to reply to the
-questions put to you in open court, and which shall now be rehearsed
-by the clerk?’
-
-I said I would not put him to the trouble of reading them—I would
-tell nothing.
-
-‘Take off his handcuffs,’ said the magistrate. They were removed. The
-executioner looked inquiringly at his patron.
-
-‘I am not a cruel man,’ said the latter, drawling out his words, as
-though longer to enjoy my suspense and horror. ‘I would not wrench
-thy handsome limbs so as to spoil their symmetry. No, no; gentle
-means at first, Mr. Provost-Marshal—a squeeze or so on the nerve of
-the thumb, no stout-hearted Buccaneer can complain of.’
-
-Instantly the provost-marshal, as though he had anticipated this
-commencement, whipped from his pocket a little instrument of iron.
-It was a thumb-screw, a ‘thumbikin,’ as my countrymen called it, and
-long was it remembered with curses in many a strath, and on many a
-hill side, in my native land. For the dragoons of James Graham, of
-Claverhouse, were wont to carry them in their pouches or haversacks;
-and, many a long year after I had left the Spanish Indies, when I
-talked to old Scotchmen about my adventures there, and told them of
-the alcaide and the provost-marshal of Carthagena, they would reply,
-‘Ay, ay, we know somewhat of such torments. Even here, in Scotland,
-many a joint was wrenched, and many a bone splintered, of the men who
-in the old troublous days stood staunchly up under the blue banner,
-and bore faithful testimony for a broken covenant and a persecuted
-kirk.’
-
-But I must hasten with the tale of my own trials.
-
-‘Do your duty, provost-marshal,’ said the alcaide, gloating on the
-accursed iron machine; ‘but let us have all things in moderation—one
-thumb at a time; the prisoner cannot say that we have no bowels.’
-
-Fortunately for me, as it turned out afterwards, the executioner
-stood upon my left. He laid hold of the hand nearest to him with
-cold, clammy-feeling fingers, which touched my flesh, to my thinking,
-like small twining snakes or worms, and with great dexterity slipped
-the iron apparatus upon my thumb, turning at the same time a screw,
-so as to make it press tight. The next twist I knew would produce
-torture.
-
-‘Accused,’ began the alcaide again, ‘if you choose to tell us what
-you know of your comrades’ designs we will, even although your
-obstinacy hath been great, proceed no further in this business; if
-not, in the name of the law and the king I ordain the provost-marshal
-to proceed.’
-
-I said not a word, but drew a long breath, and nerved myself, trying
-to fix and resolutely wind up my mind and body to endure. There was a
-pause for a minute, and then the alcaide nodded. The provost-marshal
-stepped forward, grasped my wrist with his left hand, and then, at
-the same time looking steadily into my eyes, twisted the screw round
-with a rapid wrench, and instantly a pang, a throb of pain horribly
-keen, cut, as it were with a knife, from the thumb up the arm to the
-shoulder-blade. I felt a hot flush come out upon my face, and then,
-the first agonizing jerk over, a horrible tingling began, pricking
-the limb as though myriads of red-hot needles had been thrust into it.
-
-‘Do you still refuse to answer the question?’ said the alcaide. I
-bowed. He nodded, as before, and round again went the screw. This
-time the agony was fearful. I ground my teeth, my knees shook, and I
-felt the cold sweat start out in beads among the roots of my hair.
-The involuntary desire to scream was almost overmastering, but I
-curbed it with a mighty effort, swallowing down, as it were, the
-anguish, by violent efforts of the muscles of the throat. All this
-time the group who surrounded me preserved silence. There was a grim
-smile upon the face of the alcaide, but the ferret eyes of his clerk
-were gleaming with excitement, and his features were twisting with
-very pleasure. The doctor and the provost-marshal behaved like two
-men engaged in a perfectly-indifferent matter.
-
-Again the alcaide questioned me, again I made the same reply, and
-again the provost-marshal wrenched round the screw. This time, amid
-the slight squeak of the revolving iron, all heard the crackle of
-the bone; the skin too, had given way beneath metallic pressure, and
-a gush of black bruised blood spurted over the iron and the thin
-fingers of the provost-marshal, and then dropped in thick plashy
-globules upon the floor. Almost at the same instant a mist came up
-before my eyes, and hid the fierce faces which surrounded me. I
-tottered, and leant upon the surgeon, and a cold feeling of sickness
-almost unto death gripped my very being, and seemed to stop the
-fountains of life. It was the very depth of that suffering which drew
-from me the only low shuddering moan I uttered. But hardly had the
-sound escaped than there was a tramp of footsteps rushing into the
-room, and a loud voice which cried—
-
-‘Señor the alcaide is wanted upon the beach; a schooner with English
-colours set, which hath been hovering in the offing all the morning,
-is standing in for the harbour, as though she would carry the galleon
-even under the very guns of the batteries.’
-
-And in an instant, as though to roar a chorus to the words of the
-messenger, the heavy reports of great guns shook the ill-fitting
-casements of the chamber; and a great and confused jangle of many
-bells, and the echoes of a shouting crowd, came floating together
-upon the air. I started up—the mist cleared from before me—even the
-sense of pain and sickness left me, and looking with exultation on
-the pale and scared faces of my tormentors, I shouted, ‘Huzza! for
-the bold Brethren of the Coast! Courage, comrades! courage, and the
-day is our own!’
-
-‘Send the fellow back to his cell,’ said the alcaide, very hurriedly.
-‘Captain Guzman, turn out your guard. We will finish with him when we
-have finished with his comrades in the harbour. Perhaps there will be
-more to deal with presently.’
-
-‘The more the merrier,’ said the ferret-eyed clerk, and they shuffled
-hastily out together. Meantime, the provost-marshal unscrewed his
-thumbikin with as much coolness as he had adjusted it. My hand was
-all bloody and swollen. The doctor looked at it, felt the thumb with
-his fingers, and then said, ‘My good fellow, your comrades came to
-your aid just in time; another wrench and that hand would be of small
-use to you for the rest of your life.’
-
-The provost-marshal, who was wiping the blood from his instrument,
-smiled meaningly. ‘Why, good doctor,’ quoth he, ‘considering what is
-like enough to be the extent of the youngster’s life, I do not see
-the great hardship of disabling him.’
-
-The doctor shrugged his shoulders, and walked out. The only turnkey
-who remained clapped his hand on my shoulder, and I followed him,
-binding up my lacerated hand with a kerchief. I was presently
-conducted to the same cell as that which I had already occupied; but,
-to my great astonishment, instead of shutting me in and leaving me to
-my meditations, the man first cast a rapid glance up and down the
-corridor, and then closing the door upon both of us, caught me by the
-collar of the doublet, and whispered:—
-
-‘You have a good friend. Keep up your heart, and you may yet have a
-chance for your life.’
-
-The blessed words fell upon my ears like rain on parched herbage.
-
-‘Who—who is it? Of whom do you speak?’ I cried, eagerly.
-
-‘Of one who gave a shining doubloon to tell you so much; and he bade
-me add, too, that you should hold yourself in readiness for a quick
-journey.’
-
-‘But, tell me,’ I interrupted—when we heard the voice of the
-provost-marshal without, calling, ‘Lazarillo, Lazarillo, what keeps
-you?’ The turnkey made but one bound of it to the door, locked the
-cell with a clash, and hurried away, leaving me with an aching
-hand, but a palpitating and a very grateful heart. All was not yet
-over with me. I had still a right to the rays of the sun. The black
-grave, which in my mind I had seen for the last hour continually
-yawning before me, was gone. Most blessed of the moods of the heart,
-Hope, slid again into my being, and sent the hot blood dancing
-madly through my veins. I paced up and down the cell wildly. I
-tried to leap at the barred window. The pain of my lacerated flesh
-I remembered no more; and clenching both fists, I vowed that, once
-without these walls, it was only a dead body which the Spaniards
-would bring back. The roar of the conflict in the harbour, which
-still continued, worked me up to the highest pitch of excitement. I
-sought to distinguish, in fancy, between the guns of our enemies and
-those of my friends; and every time I heard the sharp ring of the
-smaller metal, which I concluded was fired from aboard the schooner,
-I broke out in rhapsodies, calling upon the ball to fly truly home
-to its mark, and to hit that pestilent alcaide or his ferret-eyed
-clerk. At length I began to cool down, and get somewhat ashamed of
-my fervour. Besides, the noise of cannonading abated—the reports of
-the guns coming fainter and fainter, as if the fight were being
-carried on more to seaward. From this I judged that the schooner
-had been beaten off. Indeed, I could expect no other termination
-of the attack, which, when I came to think of it in sober earnest,
-appeared to me to be little short of madness, and I wondered how
-Stout Jem had come to attempt it. From these matters I began to think
-more reasonably of my own situation. I little doubted but that my
-unknown friend was no other than Don José, who appeared to my mind
-to be as singular a mixture of base and generous; qualities as a
-man could be composed of. But how was he to help me? Was the mode
-of escape to be by force or escalade? To cut the window-bars would
-require a file, and to mount to them a ladder. Then, my left hand
-was in a bad condition for either working or clambering, and even
-should I succeed in making my way into the city, whither was I to go
-next? I had no place of refuge, but the woods, and without arms or
-ammunition, little hope of aught but a lingering death there, either
-by starvation or wild Indians. Indeed, the more I mused, the more
-gloomy after all my prospects seemed.
-
-The excitement at the first notion of escape thus passed away. My
-wounded hand, although not altogether disabled, was very stiff and
-painful, and I had not even the means of washing away the clotted
-blood. So, sitting, in no merry mood, pondering, upon my bench, the
-slow hot hours crept by. The sunlight came in a fiery stream where
-the blue moonbeam had lain the night before. The buzz of insects and
-the rustling of rich foliage, waved by the fresh sea-breeze, sounded
-cheerily from without, and sometimes a puff, stronger than common,
-would find its way into the hot cell, and play round my cheeks and
-nostrils, bringing with it the cool, fresh savour of the ocean.
-
-It might have been about one o’clock, when the friendly turnkey
-unlocked the door and entered, carrying with him a very fair dinner
-of meat and roasted plantains, to which was added a small measure of
-generous Spanish wine. I entreated him, all in a breath, to give me
-more information touching my projected escape, and also as respected
-the fate of the schooner. In regard to the latter affair, the man
-said, he believed that the attack had only been a sort of a feint, or
-bravado, and that, after some cannonading, a boat with a white flag
-had put off from the schooner, which had thereupon ceased firing; but
-the Spaniards not being willing to come to any truce with pirates
-and sea-robbers, as they called us, had continued to fire upon the
-boat, and a ball breaking the oars on one side, and very narrowly
-missing the boat herself, those in her pulled round and back to the
-schooner. A small squadron of armadilloes then got under weigh, and
-the schooner had nothing else for it than to stand out to sea, the
-armadilloes following her, and both exchanging long shots at each
-other. This I afterwards understood to be a very fair account of the
-enterprise, which was indeed undertaken only in the hope of wresting
-me out of the Spaniards’ hands. But I had other friends at work, as
-the reader will see. The turnkey, who was, or rather pretended to
-be, in some agitation at the thought of the work which he had been
-bribed to undertake, now told me that about two o’clock, at the hour
-when most of the inhabitants of Carthagena are in use to take their
-siesta, or day-sleep he would be with me again.
-
-‘You may be thankful,’ quoth he, ‘that you were not taken as
-prisoner to the fort, where, indeed, there would be little chance
-of escape, let you have what friends you might; but this is not a
-regular prison, being only a sort of guardhouse, attached to the
-alcaide’s mansion, for the convenience of keeping accused persons for
-examination. Therefore, once out of your cell, and furnished with
-the pass-word, you will have little ado in making your flight to the
-woods, where you must shift for yourself—he who has paid me to peril
-my place in the matter having no refuge to offer you.’
-
-The reader may be sure that I exhausted myself in compliments and
-thanks to my benefactor, whom the jailer obstinately refused to name,
-but about whom there was in my mind no doubt whatever. Neither was I
-in any great surprise, when I came attentively to consider the state
-of matters, at the mode in which the affair was to be arranged, and
-the easy compliance for some trifling bribe of the jailer. I called
-to mind how often I had been told that, in almost all Spanish prisons
-in the Indies, the jailers and magistrates were just as great rogues
-as the thieves they dealt with. Nay, I had no doubt but that the
-alcaide himself would have taken a bribe to let me go, as readily
-as the turnkey, only he would have been very like to break his
-engagement, and hang me after all; thus gratifying himself in both
-ways. As it was, I considered that my chances were very good. The
-turnkey did not at all seem to apprehend any interruption from his
-comrades. ‘We live in very good intelligence,’ quoth he; ‘and none of
-us cares to spoil the other’s game. There is but one man I dread, and
-he, I hope, is out of the way. Curses on that sharp-eyed clerk of the
-alcaide’s, he takes a pleasure in marring the best-laid schemes.’
-
-But I swore within myself, that were I interrupted by this official,
-he would have small chance of ever looking out of his ferret-eyes
-again. I think the jailer understood what was passing in my mind,
-although I spoke not, for he smiled meaningly, as he said, peering
-into my face, with a curious expression on his own—
-
-‘And this clerk is but a weak slip of a man after all. I warrant you
-a stout fellow would smash his brittle bones as easily as I would so
-many pipe-stems. However, that is no business of mine. In half an
-hour, Señor the Buccaneer, all will be ready.’
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXI.
-
- HOW I ESCAPE FROM THE SPANISH GUARDHOUSE—AM CHASED BY BLOOD-HOUNDS
- IN THE WOODS, AND HOW AT LENGTH I FIND A STRANGE ASYLUM.
-
-
-The clock, from a neighbouring church, struck two. My cell-door
-opened gently, and the turnkey appeared, carrying in his hand a
-tolerable-sized bundle, which I eagerly assisted him to undo. It
-contained a good suit, such as is commonly worn by Spanish sailors,
-with stout leggings fitted for scrambling in the woods, and a
-broad-brimmed and steeple-crowned felt hat. The doublet was tied
-round my waist with a broad silk sash, and into this I stuck a
-gleaming knife, similar to that carried by almost all Spaniards. But
-when the turnkey produced, from under his doublet, a short-barrelled
-carabine, or musquetoon—a _trabucco_, as he called it—with a fair
-supply of shot and slugs, I burst out into exclamations of gratitude.
-
-‘Long live Don José!’ I cried. ‘I fear not the woods now; there is
-life and food within this hollow iron.’
-
-‘Look you,’ said the turnkey, ‘here be the words of the nobleman who
-hath sent these. “Tell,” quoth he, “tell the Scots mariner, that as
-he bore himself before the alcaide like one whose word and good faith
-were dear to him, that I supply him with these weapons, upon his
-solemn promise that he will use them only to procure himself food,
-and that he will not turn them against any Spaniard, excepting only
-strictly in the way of self-defence.”’
-
-You may be assured that this reasonable pledge I gave with the utmost
-readiness, and poising my musquetoon, and trying how it fitted to my
-shoulder, I cried, gaily—
-
-‘Come—come! Despatch—despatch! good master jailer; your friends will
-be rousing themselves from their siesta. Faith, man, were you as near
-the gallows as I am every moment I linger here, you would pant to
-hear the free rustle of the branches above you.’
-
-All the while that the turnkey was helping me on with my new costume,
-I kept thinking of where I should bend my steps as soon as I got
-clear of Carthagena. It was very likely, I thought, that the schooner
-would keep hovering upon the coast, still waiting for the galleon,
-the sailing of which would no doubt be delayed by what had happened.
-I considered, moreover, that the Will-o’-the-Wisp would be most
-likely to ply to the eastward, so as to keep the weather-gauge of the
-port she was watching, and that it was quite possible that she might
-approach near enough the shore for me to make a signal, by kindling a
-fire, or by any other means which might seem available, in order to
-attract her notice. So I determined, as soon as I could get fairly
-free of the town, to turn to the eastward and to descend again upon
-the coast some eight or ten miles from Carthagena.
-
-‘Now,’ quoth the turnkey, ‘you will easily perceive that I am not
-to be seen in this business. Your escape must appear to have been
-effected by yourself, and it will be the more easy, inasmuch as the
-lock on this door has seen much service, and is not difficult to
-wrench off; especially when a man is provided with such a weapon as
-this,’ and he handed to me a strong iron chisel, or rather short
-crow-bar.
-
-‘Listen,’ he continued; ‘I will again lock you up. Let five minutes
-elapse, then wrench open the door; take the two first turnings to
-your left, the next turning to your right, the next to your left
-again, and you are opposite the street. A sentry stands there. If
-he be asleep, as is not unlikely, good and well. If he be awake and
-challenge, reply, “Guarda Costa,”—that is the countersign. You must
-then shift for yourself. Farewell, Señor Buccaneer, and if ever you
-meet Don José fail not to tell him I behaved honestly by you, and
-earned his doubloons well. You will not forget “Guarda Costa.” Adieu.’
-
-The door closed on him; I waited in silence and with a beating heart.
-It was a long five minutes which elapsed; but at its expiration, as
-nearly as I could judge, I inserted the short crowbar between the
-staple which held the bolt, and the lintel of the door. The wood was
-crumbling and rotten, and the iron eaten with long gathering rust.
-Gradually, as I applied my strength, the mouldy timber gave way
-beneath the pressure, and the metal creaked and crackled. I could
-have burst it off with one effort of my muscles, but I feared to
-make a noise; and so, gradually working the point of the crowbar
-further and further into the wreck of the dilapidated fastenings,
-I increased the strain, until at length, with one long, steady and
-vehement wrench, I tore the staples from the yielding wood. The metal
-fell with a clash upon the floor; the door, which opened inwardly,
-swung back; and I saw—the ferret eyes and the twitching visage of the
-alcaide’s clerk, staring and grinning through the opening.
-
-I started back as though a demon had looked me in the face. The small
-wrinkled and puckered features worked and twisted, and the eyes
-gleamed so as to resemble nothing earthly. Then I saw the hand of the
-clerk creep stealthily towards the bosom of his mean doublet, without
-doubt to pluck therefrom a weapon; his lips moved, and the first
-syllables of a cry of alarm had passed them, when I sprang forward,
-and the grasp of my fingers round his meagre throat smothered the
-words. All this took place in an instant. I dragged the wretch inside
-the cell; struck to the door with a blow of my foot, and clutching
-both his thin wrists in my left hand, gripped his throat with my
-right, until the skin got blue and the eyes protruded all glaring and
-bloodshot. I thought for a moment to strangle him as we stood, but as
-I felt the weak struggles of the hapless creature, who writhed like
-a child in my grasp, my heart softened. I released my hold upon his
-throat.
-
-‘Were you strong and I weak,’ I whispered to him, ‘there would be
-little pity shown. You are athirst for my blood, but Providence has
-willed that you shall not be gratified. As I grant you mercy now,
-show mercy to others.’
-
-The clerk tried to speak, but only husky murmurs passed his lips.
-
-‘Lie there,’ I continued, ‘until your friends come to your rescue.’
-
-With that I flung the man upon the floor, so as partially to stun
-him, and then, with the aid of some ratline stuff, which sailors
-go seldom without, and which was in the pocket of my old doublet,
-I both bound and gagged him, not very completely, it is true, but
-sufficiently, as I believed, to prevent any alarm being given until I
-had got a good start. It was pitiful to see the impotent spite with
-which the manacled creature writhed upon the ground, gibbering with
-his speechless mouth, and flashing his green eyes as though he could
-have shot blistering venom out of them upon me. But I had little
-time to bestow upon the spectacle: with a quick step and a beating
-heart I fled along the corridors. During my scuffle with the clerk,
-the turnkey’s directions had never ceased to ring in my ears. The
-two first turnings to the left, the next to the right, the next to
-the left again. The silent passages echoed to my footsteps with a
-hollow, ominous sound. There were many nail-studded doors, similar
-to that of my own cell, on either side. As I made the last turning,
-I had a glimpse, in the distance, of the guard-room into which I had
-been at first conducted, and then, looking straight ahead, I saw
-before me the narrow street, with its deep, dusty ruts, scorching, as
-it were, in the hot sun. The passage terminated in a great gateway,
-with pillars and a portico, and on the left side of the door stood
-a sentry-box, painted white. Pausing for a moment to assume all
-possible coolness, I walked steadily out humming the butt-end of a
-Spanish sea-song, which the manners of that nation sing when heaving
-the anchor to the bows.
-
-Just as I passed the porch I glanced at the sentry. He was a young
-man; his features bronzed almost black with the sun, and wearing
-silver earrings, glittering amongst his long greasy curls. The fellow
-was sitting leaning against his sentry-box; his musket, with his
-bayonet fixed, hung carelessly across his knee. As I strode by, he
-half opened his sleepy eyes, and muttered mechanically as though
-speaking in a dream.
-
-‘Guarda Costa,’ I said, carelessly. The man muttered something
-again, and his chin fell upon his breast. Like a phantom I glided
-up the hot and silent street. Not a soul was to be seen. The cloth
-of outside blinds and the gay draperies hanging from balconies,
-rustled in the cooling wind, while those thin slices of wood, forming
-what are called in the Indies, ‘jalousies,’ clattered with a merry
-rattle. Dogs lay listlessly stretched out in shady corners; bullocks,
-harnessed to clumsy carts, lay chewing the cud between the shafts,
-and two or three mendicants, as I judged them from their rags and
-filth, were stretched beneath gateways and under pillars, where the
-breeze came freshest. But the spell of sleep was everywhere. Midnight
-in New Spain might bring the time of gallant assignation and joyous
-revel, but the drowsy afternoon shone upon a city steeped in sleep,
-even as though one of the mighty charms which I used to read of in
-idle chronicles of old fancies, were abroad over the dreaming people,
-one of those charms of glamour and gramarye of the days when Michael
-Scott split the Eildon hills in three, and Thomas of Erceldoune was
-courted of the faery queen!
-
-‘So, blessings on that good old Spanish custom, the siesta,’ I cried
-to myself, as I sped along the deserted thoroughfare. Carthagena is
-not large, neither is it fortified towards the land side. Very little
-time had therefore elapsed until I found myself fairly beyond the
-city, and running along a rough road, with great plenty of trees and
-bushes on either side, and patches of fields, wherein grew the broad
-brown-leaved tobacco plant, and here and there a hut, with a yam
-garden about it, or the country house of a Carthagena merchant, with
-prim terraces and avenues of limes, and fountains sparkling among the
-leaves. These I ran past as speedily as possible; but there was no
-appearance of aught stirring about them more than in the city. The
-siesta was everywhere, ay, even in the great woods, which at length
-I reached; the birds sitting motionless upon the branches, and the
-beasts of the earth hiding in dens and holes from the fervid noontide
-heat. The road which I had followed gradually disappeared, splitting
-as it were into many little tracks made by hunters or other wanderers
-in the woods. Around me there soon rose rocks and steep hills, and
-the tangled underwood and the long grass made walking difficult.
-However, I was in too great spirits to feel much weariness. Every
-step I took was almost as a year added to my life. So, at last, when
-I saw that I had really plunged fairly into the wilderness, I forced
-my way amid the rank vegetation, tearing through brake and thicket,
-and singing and shouting lustily in the fulness of my heart. The sun
-was my compass, and by him I steered eastwardly.
-
-‘Ho! ho! Stout Jem,’ I cried to myself, ‘mayhap, we are but now
-laying the same course; the gay schooner out upon the tilting sea,
-and he that loves her well amid the shady woods and green savannahs
-of the main. So we shall meet again, comrades—we shall meet again!’
-
-In this merry mood I traversed several miles before I thought of
-refreshment or of rest. It was just as my limbs began to ache and my
-breath to come short, as I breasted a steep hill, that I came to a
-fair fountain gurgling from a rift in a low mossy rock. It was not an
-unknown well of the wilderness, for human hands had placed a doubled
-leaf, through which, as through a spout, the living water ran from
-the runnel, and tinkled out into a natural basin beneath.
-
-So here I sat me down and wiped the perspiration from my brow. It was
-a lonely spot, and I wondered whose hands had plucked the leaf and
-laid it in its place. From the basin I speak of, the water ran amid
-rustling reeds, and great floating leaves, and gaudy flowers, until
-it spread itself out into a shallow pool, half covered with greasy
-scum, but elsewhere as clear as the air above it. In the centre of
-the pool sat a little bird of the diver species, with the glossy neck
-and the bright beady eyes which I love in water-fowl. He took little
-notice of me, and I sat and watched him as he glided to and fro amid
-the floating leaves and twigs which had fallen from the trees. While
-thus occupied, I heard once or twice the distant bay as of a dog.
-
-‘Ho!’ thought I, ‘the siesta is over, and Señors the dogs are the
-first astir.’
-
-My eye fell upon the water-fowl again. It seemed disquieted, and
-swam quickly to and fro, making a soft quackle, and jerking its
-little head, as its kind do when listening. The bay of the dog
-was heard again—it seemed to have come nearer—and, directly, the
-water-bird, half swimming and half flying, beating the surface with
-its wings as it went, took refuge in the thickest of the sedges
-and disappeared. This little incident roused me. I started up and
-hearkened. Again, the deep hollow echo of the hound’s bay struck my
-ears. It was very different from the yelping of a woodman’s cur; and
-the dogs of the Indians do not bark. Immediately a thought flashed
-upon me—a ghastly—appalling thought: the Spaniards were upon my
-track with bloodhounds! Almost instinctively I started up and fled,
-stumbling as I went. I had a horror of these fiends of dogs, trained
-to hunt men; and, as I flew along, I thought every moment that I
-heard the savage creatures panting close behind me. After about ten
-minutes’ quick running, I stopped, quite spent, to breathe, and,
-listening for a moment, a faint sound of hallooing, and a burst of
-baying, loud and long, came floating on the wind. I turned and fled
-again, straining every nerve mechanically, although I knew but too
-well that, fleet as was my foot, every time it touched the ground
-it left the mark which guided the avengers. I, therefore, tried to
-leap and double, and even got up into a tree and swung myself along
-by means of the interlacing branches. But this was slow work, I
-dropped to the ground, and ran again. All this time the voice of the
-dog was sounding nearer and nearer behind me, and I wondered how
-my pursuers could keep up with him, at the rate he was evidently
-running. Nevertheless, I loosened the knife in my girdle and prepared
-for the struggle. As I did so, I thought of my blunderbuss. Heaven!
-I had left it behind in my first alarm at the well. The token would
-have told the Spaniards that their four-footed guide was as sure as
-it appeared swift. The baying of the accursed hound came close and
-closer. Oh! how I envied the birds as they rose with a rustle and a
-scream from the foliage, and soared away in the air, which leaves
-no track to tell of who has left it. Covered with sweat and dust,
-and reeling with fatigue, I ran almost at random. Twice I disturbed
-glistening snakes, which coiled their spiral folds and flashed their
-black eyes at me, and then glided away like slimy painted ropes
-pulled by some unseen hand amongst the herbage. But at that instant
-the bite of the labarri, or the hollow tooth of the rattlesnake,
-had hardly more horror for me than the gripe of the crunching jaws
-which were fast following on my track. By this time, the thunder
-of the hound’s voice was so close that I involuntarily turned at
-every step to see him make his appearance. The final moment came
-at last. Crashing with a great rustle through a bed of yielding
-bushes, sprang a huge, tawny dog, black and foaming at the muzzle.
-The creature ran, cat-like, with his belly close to the ground, his
-big, muscular limbs, showing as supple and slamp as a tiger’s, and
-his broad deep chest, and great hanging ears, all speckled white
-with flakes of foam. I looked for his master, but saw none; and,
-gazing more closely, observed a leash round the creature’s neck, and
-a broken leathern thong trailing beside him. This at once explained
-the rapidity with which he had overtaken me—the animal having broken
-away from those who led him, and it also sent a cheery flush of hope,
-dancing through my brain. Oh, how I cursed my heedlessness in leaving
-the carabine by the well! A handful of slugs would have stopped the
-blood-hound for ever, and my pursuers deprived of their guide, could
-seek me but at random through the woods. Could I manage him with the
-knife?—that was the question. I had no long time to debate it. I must
-either slay or be slain—there was no choice. I stopped, faced round,
-tore off my doublet, and wrapped it, in thick and heavy folds, round
-my left arm—shielding my wounded hand in addition, by grasping with
-it the inside of my strong and stiff felt hat. Then clutching my
-knife in my right, I knelt on one knee, and waited for the onset of
-the blood-hound.
-
-I had, indeed, hardly assumed my position of defence when he was
-on me. True to the instinct of his kind, he lifted neither eyes nor
-nose from the ground—running, truly and steadily, by the scent,
-until he was scarcely a couple of fathoms from me. Then, indeed, he
-flung up his nostrils in the air, and suddenly seeing me, uttered
-a loud splitting yell, champing at the same time the foam in a hot
-shower from his jaws, and then, with a great scrambling bound,
-furious and open-mouthed, pounced upon me, driving his teeth into
-the folds of the doublet, which I held before me as a shield, and
-dashing me, by the very force of his spring, over and over amid the
-grass, scrambling and tearing the skin from my shoulders, with his
-huge horny paws, and furiously shaking and riving the stuff of the
-doublet which, luckily for me, was both thick and strong. For a
-moment or two, I had no opportunity of using the knife, I could not
-see where to hit. There was before me but a vision of great foaming,
-tearing jaws, and flashing eyes, and struggling limbs—sometimes above
-me—sometimes beneath, as we rolled over and over in the scuffle. But
-at length, I had a chance; the broad muscular chest of the noble
-creature was left, for a moment, unsheltered by his fore-legs, and
-in a second I had driven the keen strong knife, through and through
-his lungs, the handle smiting the dog’s breast with a hollow blow.
-There was an immediate convulsion of the animal’s limbs. Letting
-go his hold of my doublet, he flung his muzzle into the air, and
-with a sound between a cough and a yell, threw up a hot sputtering
-shower of blood. Quick as thought, my reeking knife was withdrawn,
-and again and again plunged in up to the very hilt—the muscles of
-the creature’s body—a moment before, all strained and tense as
-iron bands—gradually collapsed—the fierce eyes turned, so that
-the yellowish whites shone, with a grim glare into mine, and it
-required but a slight effort to shake off the quivering and bleeding
-creature, which as I rose trembling and panting from the fray—fell
-heavily from my limbs, and lay gasping in its blood among the
-grass. Truly, it was a noble dog, as large and more powerful than
-the mightiest stag-hound, but its deep chest had uttered its last
-bay, its giant limbs had run their last race. The life passed out
-of the quivering flesh, as I stood and gazed at it. Then flinging
-over my shoulders my doublet, all torn, and stained with blood
-and froth, I addressed myself again to flight—thankful and joyous
-for my deliverance. ‘Three good thrusts of this trusty steel,’
-said I to myself, sheathing my knife, ‘and the utmost spite of the
-Spaniard has been baffled.’ I was reckoning without my host. Hardly
-had the words escaped my lips, when, again, the accursed bay of a
-blood-hound came floating in the wind. I paused and listened with
-clenched teeth. For an instant, I hoped that it might be but the
-dying growl of the animal killed. But, no, he lay stark, and the
-foam was already cooling upon his jaw. Again and again, came the
-ominous sound—I could not be mistaken. My pursuers had started with
-at least a brace of dogs—and they were still following fast and hot
-upon my footsteps. A shuddering chill passed all over me, and I felt
-sick at heart—then I roused myself. ‘Perhaps,’ I argued, ‘the blood
-of the dead hound will confuse the scent of the living one. I have
-heard of such things.’ But afterwards I learned that the Spaniards,
-seeing the body from a distance, had not allowed their four-footed
-guide to approach it closely, but that leading him in a circle round
-the carcase, the animal had again struck upon my scent—closer and
-fresher than ever. Thus it was, that as I forced my way through the
-thickets of bushes, and long rustling grass—I ever heard behind me
-the hollow boom of that accursed creature, as he gave loud tongue,
-and the distant hallooing as the Spaniards answered him with shouts
-and execrations. Summoning my resources, I tried, as I ran, to call
-to mind the legends of men chased with blood hounds—of which I had
-heard in my childhood, and the means whereby they had baffled their
-pursuers. For many such tales are told on winter nights by Scottish
-hearths—of the bold moss-troopers of Teviot and Annan, and the wild
-northern caterans beyond the Highland line. But my memory seemed
-to have forsaken me. I could remember none of the devices which I
-had so often admired—although it is possible that were I keeping
-a calm mid-watch at sea, heaps of such stories would have flocked
-unsummoned into my brain. So I did naught save press instinctively
-forward—having little idea of the direction I was pursuing, and
-indeed seeking only for the open glades and avenues of the forest,
-through which I could make the better speed. But hope began again
-rapidly to leave me. The waves roar not after a scudding bark, with
-more unceasing tumult, than there arose behind me the clamour of my
-pursuers. I winded and doubled—I ran north—then turned on my heel
-and speeded in the opposite direction; but still, as a cock-boat
-follows a ship to which she is made fast, through all her tackings
-and veerings—so did my pursuers tread steadily in my track. I began
-to grow desperate. Again, I drew my knife from its sheath, and
-stopping, and leaning, panting, against a great tree, I made up my
-mind to rest there—recover what strength I could, and sell my life as
-dearly as might be. At that moment, I heard a low continuous sound—a
-deep hollow boom echoing faintly in the wood. I listened intently,
-and then started up, almost with the vigour with which I had began
-my flight. I could not be deceived—what I heard was the roar of a
-waterfall, and the sound in an instant brought, as it were, a vision
-before my eyes. It was the vision of an old, iron-clasped book, which
-we had at home at Kirkleslie. Its cover was thick parchment, its
-leaves were brown with age, and the letters were strange and quaint.
-This book my father had prized next to the Bible, and those which
-treated of holy things, and often was it in his hands, both out at
-sea and by the cosy ingle-nook in the stormy winter time. It was,
-indeed, an ancient chronicle of the ‘Life and Death of King Robert
-the Bruce,’ and at the same instant of time as I remembered it—one
-sentence in particular loomed, as it were, before me, until I could
-almost fancy I saw the very strange old letters quivering in the
-sunshine. This was the sentence:—
-
- “And now the Kynge being sore pressed by the Blood-houndis of ye
- traytour Lorne, ye whythe had followed him even from ye up gettynge
- of ye sun, and beyinge come unto ane small rivere, did straighte
- enter therynne, and in such mannerre pursue his flyghte, so that ye
- living waterres washynge clean awaye ye scente of his footsteppes,
- the blood-houndis were at faulte, and ye traytour Lorne was baffled
- for that tymme. Thus did ye Kynge escape aue great dangere.”
-
-‘Fool as I was,’ I exclaimed, ‘not to have thought of the Bruce and
-Macdougall of Lorne before!’ With new life and vigour, I pressed
-forward in the direction of the waterfall. The noise came every
-instant louder and louder upon my ear; and in a short space, I had
-burst my way down a steep bank, and to the edge of a deep pool, or
-cauldron, into which a large rivulet came thundering and foaming
-down, through a deep chasm in the rocks above. I had little time to
-admire the loveliness of the cataract; but rushing to the outlet
-of the pool, I saw that the stream went dancing down a pebbly bed,
-intersected here and there with low veins and ledges of rocks, like
-weirs, over which the bright water flashed and foamed right merrily.
-So, with a cry of joy, I bounded into the stream, and began rapidly
-to splash my way downwards, running with almost frantic haste,
-sometimes slipping and stumbling over the smooth slimy stones,
-sometimes floundering into a deepish pool, scaring the fish, which
-flew gleaming away, like wedges of burnished metal, to seek shelter
-under the ledges of rock, or amongst the twisted roots of trees upon
-the bank, among which the water frothed and gurgled.
-
-‘My great and fervent benison be upon water,’ I cried to myself.
-‘It hath ever been my home, and now is it my refuge and my safety.
-Thanks, thanks, good secret-keeping stream! Amid the merry music of
-thy murmur, thou wilt never prate the whereabouts of the poor flying
-mariner. Rush speedily on with me, fair and living waters, sweeping
-my track fast downwards to the sea!’
-
-With such-like rhapsodies, I relieved the fulness of my heart, as I
-followed the stream, splashing down in its very centre. Sometimes
-when a small waterfall interrupted its course, I had to scramble
-ashore and make a brief circuit, but I soon took to the water again.
-In about ten minutes after I had first entered the river, the bay of
-the bloodhound ceased to be heard; but I distinguished the sound of
-a clearly-blown horn or trumpet, and the report of one or two guns,
-as though one party were making signals to another. Still I pressed
-on, but more cautiously—watching the banks very narrowly, and at the
-places where the stream flowed silently, pausing to listen with all
-my ears. There was no alarm, and I began to grow very confident,
-when all at once it occurred to me, as I glanced at the point of the
-horizon to which the sun was now hastening, that I must be rapidly
-returning either to Carthagena, or to some point very near it, upon
-the coast, where, undoubtedly, this rivulet emptied itself into the
-sea. This consideration at once arrested my footsteps; and creeping
-among the roots of a tree, beneath an overhanging bank, I began to
-muse upon what was best to be done. I did not doubt but that my
-pursuers had fairly lost my traces, and that it would be a hard
-matter for them again to find the scent. Indeed I considered that I
-might very safely leave the water, and pursue my original westward
-route amongst the woods; but then I was unarmed, excepting my knife,
-and without even the means of lighting a fire how was I to live among
-the forests and the wildernesses which stretched backward from the
-coast? As I mused, a thought struck me. When first captured by the
-Spaniards, I had several double doubloons, and a few pieces of eight
-about me. This money I had been careful to preserve, and possessed
-it still, save one of the doubloons, which I had given to my jailer,
-as he bade me adieu. Why, then, thought I, should I not return to
-Carthagena as soon as the night falls, and endeavour to purchase
-fairly what I want? I speak Spanish sufficiently well. I am dressed
-like a Spanish sailor. Why should I not, by a circuitous path,
-reach the seaward part of the city, and making believe that I have
-landed from a vessel in the bay, purchase what arms and ammunition
-I require, not forgetting some food, and so leaving the town again
-in the darkness, pursue my way westward? The more I thought of this
-scheme, the more feasible did it appear. To be sure, there was a risk
-of being taken, and perhaps hung; but if I plunged unarmed into the
-woods, I had at least the certainty of dying a lingering death by
-starvation, or of being murdered by the savages. Therefore, without
-much ado, I decided upon braving the immediate danger, and purchasing
-what I wanted in the town, from which I had so recently fled. With
-this design, I began again to wade slowly down the river, thinking
-to myself that if any one noticed the wet state of my garments, I
-might easily account for it, by saying that I had but just now landed
-in a small boat through the surf. My progress was of course but
-slow; and several huts being built upon the banks of the stream, I
-was obliged now and then to leave the water and take circuits round
-about, keeping as much as possible in the shadow of the woods. I met,
-however, with no interruption; and so, in about the space of an hour
-and a half or thereby, I heard the sound of the surf. On gaining the
-coast I found it to consist of considerable sand-hills, with many
-small bays, and lines of breakers extending several cable-lengths
-from the shore. The weather being moderate, however, the surf was not
-violent. My first act was to creep to the top of one of the highest
-sand-hills, and look anxiously to seaward. There were the sails of
-one or two fishing-boats, and as many coasting craft of small burden
-in sight, but nothing like our schooner; so I descended and began
-to move to the eastward. Before I had taken many steps, however, I
-recollected that Carthagena was fortified at its seaward extremities,
-and I asked myself whether I could safely attempt to pass through
-the line of defences. The countersign I knew, but it might have
-been changed since my escape, or perhaps it only applied to the
-guard of the alcaide’s house. While I was thus debating the matter
-with myself, I suddenly saw floating in the shallow water near the
-mouth of the small river a small boat or canoe, bottom upward, and,
-running hastily towards her, found her to be no other than the negro
-fisherman’s canoe, which we had upset the night of our unfortunate
-reconnoitring expedition. I straightway determined to turn this piece
-of luck to account, and, instead of proceeding by land, to paddle
-round and disembark in any quiet corner of the bay. On righting the
-canoe, I found she was but little damaged, and the paddles having
-been secured by pieces of spun yarn, as is usual in the boats of
-fishermen, were both ready for use. Therefore, without more ado, I
-got into the boat and pulled her off to sea. There were not less than
-three bars formed by the sea at the mouth of the stream, and the
-breakers burst white upon them all. However, by watching my time,
-and carefully attending to the run of the seas, I got over the inner
-two very easily. On the outward bank the surf broke heavier, and
-once or twice I expected to have had to swim for it. However, I had
-better luck, the canoe was very lively, and danced like a cork on
-the broken seas, so that at length I fairly made the smooth swell,
-with a boat, however, half full of water. After baling her out I
-began slowly to paddle eastward, the boat being impelled by the dying
-powers of the sea breeze, and presently, just as the sun was dipping,
-I opened the bay of Carthagena, and seeing an old slimy wooden jetty,
-only used apparently by a few fishermen, I made for it. Truly, says
-that brave man, (and also as brave a penman,) whom afterwards I
-well knew, William Dampier, ‘Carthagena is a fair city open to the
-sea.’ The level beams of the setting sun glowed upon the heaving
-water, and upon the great Spanish ships, lying like piled castles,
-with high forecastles and carved and galleried poops, slowly rocking
-to the solemn moving seas; and shorewards, upon the bright line of
-gaily-painted houses, with verandahs and balconies all fluttering
-with tinted draperies; and the pinnacles of churches and convents,
-from whence the evening bells came pealing out into the rich glowing
-air. One or two small fishing-craft were slowly making for the beach,
-and a canoe or two would now and then glide between the shipping and
-the shore; but to my great comfort no one seemed to pay the slightest
-attention to my humble self. Therefore, I made fast the canoe to the
-jetty whereof I spoke, and which was all hung with nets put there
-to dry, and walked, the more boldly as it was now grey dusk, into
-the city, looking for some shop or store where I might be served
-with the articles which I needed. The traders and merchants were now
-beginning to close their warehouses, and so it behoved me quickly
-to find a suitable shop. The streets in which I wandered being very
-narrow and high, were all but dark; lights gleamed out of the houses,
-shadowy figures moved upon balconies, and grave men with long cloaks
-stood by doorways, talking in their sonorous tongue, and smoking
-great pipes of tobacco. Still no one took notice of me, and I was the
-more assured, inasmuch as I saw around me many seamen dressed as I
-was myself, one or two of whom hailed me ‘comrade,’ and would have
-taken me to be treated at the Posada. I moved, however, with a quick
-stealthy step, keeping my eyes warily abroad, and at length, in a
-small street or lane, found a low-roofed shop, or rather stall, quite
-open to the thoroughfare, in which, in the middle of a collection of
-fire-arms, and steel weapons of many kinds, sat an old, hook-nosed,
-grey-headed man, with a very dirty face and great iron spectacles,
-drinking a bowl of savoury cocoa, and at the same time dictating
-to a little lad, dressed in a thread-bare fashion, some bills of
-charges which the boy was writing in a great greasy account-book, by
-the light of a single candle, which flared and flickered in the open
-shop. The old merchant I concluded to be a Jew, and judged that so
-long as I paid a good price for what I wanted, I would be asked no
-questions which it might be inconvenient to answer. I, therefore,
-entered the shop, and was about to speak, when the Jew, who had not
-perceived me, suddenly raised his voice, and, addressing some one
-whom I had not seen by reason of a pillar which supported the roof of
-the shop, said—
-
-‘Not a pistole—not a maravedi! Father of Abraham! I think it is a
-robber thou art. Here be your last bills of exchange, for which I
-advanced thee money, returned dishonoured by the goldsmith at Cadiz.
-Go thy ways—go thy ways; thou shalt have no gold here!’
-
-Upon this discouraging address, a man in military attire rose
-grumbling from a chest upon which he had been sitting, and at the
-same time making as though he would draw his weapon on the merchant.
-But the latter seemed little to heed this motion.
-
-‘Take thy lantern, Moses,’ he said to the boy, ‘and light out
-this honourable cavalier, who hath found at last that impertinent
-importunity doth not always unbutton a man’s pouches.’
-
-The lad stepped with his light towards the spot where I stood, and
-the would-be borrower following him, still muttering and threatening
-the Jew with all sorts of vengeance as an unbelieving hound, who
-would trample on the holy Cross—the latter cried out, ‘Hold up thy
-lamp, Moses, and give the cavalier light enough to swear by.’
-
-The boy waved his lantern with a grin, and the light flashing on the
-soldier, I recognised in an instant the flushed and gross features
-of the Captain Guzman, noways improved in expression by the little
-scene in which he had no doubt been an actor. The recognition was,
-unfortunately, mutual, for just as I recoiled back into the shadow so
-as to allow him to pass, he roared out—
-
-‘Holy mother! the English dog of a pirate, who escaped to-day,
-after half-throttling the alcaide’s clerk!’ And with these words,
-he pounced upon me; but I was prepared, and striking him a blow in
-the face, which, I hope, showed him every star in heaven, and a few
-additional ones besides, dancing before his eyes, I closed on him,
-and hurled him back into the shop, upsetting the Jew boy with a
-crash over a pile of casks and bales, and immediately extinguishing
-the light. Having paid this last attention to my friend, who was
-so sure that I would come to the gallows with all speed, I took
-to my heels incontinently, running at random. But Guzman, although
-overthrown, was not stunned, and continued to bawl out clamorously,
-to catch, or shoot, or stab the English pirate. The alarm was very
-quickly taken up, and the whole street was in a commotion. However,
-as every one was running about in the dusk, which already approached
-to darkness, as well as myself, and as I shouted to secure the
-English cutthroat as lustily as ever a Spaniard of them all, I was
-more inclined to laugh than to be much alarmed at my mischance, when
-a pestilent fellow, who had run out of a house in his shirt-sleeves,
-grasped me by the arm, and earnestly besought me to tell him where
-the heretic was. I replied that I had seen the rascal running down a
-certain lane, to which I pointed, when the man, turning short round
-upon me, and having most likely a good ear for his own language,
-asked me, very abruptly, from what part of Spain I came. For all
-reply, I made an effort, shook him clean off, and darted away. But
-the fellow was as nimble as I was; he was at my heels in a trice,
-shouting at the same time at the top of his voice, and pointing me
-out to others as we ran. We had a hard race of it. Half-a-dozen times
-I was grappled by willing hands, but my impetus in running enabled
-me again and again to burst away, while, to distract attention, I
-shouted and pointed ahead just as did my pursuers. All this, the
-reader must conceive, passed with breathless rapidity. It was a
-confused scene—narrow, gloomy streets, all sparkling with lights as
-people rushed to doors and balconies, and echoing to the clamour of
-voices and the tramp of footsteps, as the shouting crowd ran wildly,
-jostling and tripping each other, and many of them swearing that
-the English pirates had returned to the attack, and that there was
-nothing but pillage and murder for Carthagena. Howbeit, in the midst
-of all this confusion, I could not but be sensible that the man in
-the shirt-sleeves and his original comrades had not lost sight of me
-for an instant. Therefore I put forth my utmost speed; plunged from
-street to street and lane to lane, fearing every moment that I would
-run into what the French call a _cul-de-sac_; and, indeed, at length,
-as I emerged from a confused cluster of narrow, winding streets into
-a more open way lined with high walls, along which I ran, almost
-spent with toil, and panting for breath, I heard a great shout of
-triumph behind me, as though I was at length trapped, and looking
-narrowly ahead, I saw a high wall with iron trellis-work at the top,
-and over which ran the branches of trees, barring all passage. I was
-close to the obstacle before I saw it in the dusk, and at the same
-instant I became sensible of a small wicket-door, which, before I had
-time to think, opened, and the forms of two ladies, dressed in black,
-veiled and hooded, with lace and silk capes, stood before me.
-
-Hardly knowing what I did, I flung myself on my knees upon the
-ground. They started back, and the younger, as I judged, uttered a
-slight scream.
-
-‘Ladies,’ I gasped out, ‘I am an unfortunate Scots sailor; your
-countrymen pursue me to kill me. Gentle ladies, save my life!’
-
-Just as I said this the footsteps of the Spaniards echoed between the
-high walls.
-
-‘Where is the English rascal?’ they cried; ‘he shall die the death!’
-
-After a single whispered word, hastily passed between them, one of
-the ladies bent towards me, started back, came forwards again, and
-said in my ear, in a timid, fluttering voice:
-
-‘Rise, young man; and pass in.’
-
-I sprang up and rushed through the wicket, which the ladies closed
-again from the outside; then, couching breathlessly by the door,
-I listened. In a moment I heard the gruff voices of my pursuers,
-evidently asking the ladies whether they had seen me. What answer
-was returned I could only guess at, from hearing the disappointed
-exclamations and the retiring footsteps of the Spaniards. Then I
-fell upon my knees, and called God to bless the kind hearts which
-had saved a flying man from his deadly foes. I was in a garden.
-The high wall seemed to shut out the clamour of my pursuers, which
-had, however, doubtless, died away, as the search seemed to be
-unsuccessful. Around me were rich trees and shrubs, and gaudy
-flowers. Fresh from the tumult of a street scuffle, how peaceful a
-spot it seemed! The fireflies shot amid the bushes like sparks from
-anvils. The hum of the wings of night insects sounded like the low
-breathing of Nature sleeping. The cooling dews fell balm-like upon my
-hot, wet forehead. I sank back, leaning against the wall, exhausted
-and utterly worn by the excitement, the pain, and the great fatigue
-of the day. I felt, even before I had been ten minutes couched amid
-the sweet smelling and clustering shrubs, a sweet lethargy come over
-me, and stretching my overwrought limbs among the herbage, I fairly
-fell into a deep, calm sleep.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXII.
-
-THE FAMILY OF THE SPANISH MERCHANT.
-
-
-I was wakened by some one flashing a lantern in my face, and hastily
-starting to my feet, for I feared that I might have been discovered,
-I found myself standing beside a personage well-stricken in years,
-of grave but pleasant aspect, and soberly clad, as one of those old
-decent serving men, who become, as it were, members of the family on
-whom they attend.
-
-‘Fear for nothing, young man,’ said the servitor, seeing, I suppose,
-the momentary flurry and tremor in which I was; ‘you are in a very
-secure asylum. My good mistress, whom heaven preserve! is known for
-her charity, and the Virgin directed the steps which led you here
-to-night.’
-
-This discourse, you may be sure, was very pleasant to me; and while
-I was blessing my stars for my good luck, the old man, who was
-sufficiently garrulous, went on praising his mistress and the Virgin
-alternately, so that it became difficult to determine which he held
-in the greatest respect.
-
-‘Not a lady is there, either in Old Spain or in New—the saints be
-blessed for it! who hath even a tithe of my mistress’s virtues. So
-was it indeed with her father before her, and so will it be with her
-daughter after her; for I have well-known all three—albeit my young
-mistress is not yet turned of seventeen. Notwithstanding, however,
-she is already a most dainty and brave lady; her equal not being to
-be found in any city or colony in the Main, for which I bless the
-saints, and particularly Saint Gieronimo, who is indeed my mistress’s
-patron saint, and would be mine also, were it not that I would
-not venture to intrude upon his holy notice my poor concerns, his
-attention being no doubt, fully taken up with those of my betters.’
-
-Running on in this random way, the old man led me, while he talked,
-through the garden towards the house. It was his lady’s pleasure, he
-said, that I should eat a good supper, repose me in a good bed, and
-that I should to-morrow be introduced to herself and her daughter,
-they having, however, as I learned much to my surprise, already been
-made acquainted with some portions of my story, and longing to know
-the rest. As we spoke thus, we entered a wing of a handsome mansion,
-pillared and porticoed all round, and having a flat roof, whereon
-were set pots and tubs containing delicate flowering shrubs. We
-traversed divers passages, through which the fresh night air freely
-penetrated, and I could not but admire the delicate carving of the
-polished wood which formed the wainscoting of the walls. At length we
-entered a pleasant chamber, where was a bed, and a table well laid
-out for supper. You may imagine that I played a very good knife and
-fork, and the old steward or intendant, or whatever he was, bore me
-company with rare good will. After supper, we drank some of the most
-delicious wine to which I ever put my lips; and then, in answer to my
-earnest entreaties, my companion informed me of the name and quality
-of my preservers and hosts.
-
-‘You are not to suppose, Master Mariner,’ quoth he, ‘that you are in
-the mansion of a grandee of Spain. Because, for many generations,
-the family of the late Bartholomew Moranté were merchants, having
-great possessions both in Old and New Spain, at Alicant, upon the
-Mediterranean Sea, and on this side the ocean, at Havanna in Cuba,
-and here at Carthagena. Now, the wealth of Señor Bartholomew, my
-late master, who is with the saints, was so exceeding, that the king
-would have made him a noble, but to this dignity Señor Bartholomew
-did not in any way aspire. The first part of his life was very
-fortunate; not a galley, not a caravel sent he out, but it returned
-to him with the venture increased manyfold. But as he waxed old,
-the saints, doubtless having a mind to try his faith, it was so
-ordered that he experienced many crosses and losses, in such wise
-indeed that he left Alicant, not having any longer the means to keep
-up the brave state he had formerly supported, and came hither, and
-settled in this house at Carthagena. But his ill-fortune—praise to
-the saints, who, doubtless, took great interest in my late master,
-seeing that they were pleased thus to afflict him!—his ill-fortune,
-I say, following him, he was obliged to send away his agents at the
-Havanna, and at length, his greatest bark, richly freighted, being
-taken at sea, and all on board of her killed or sold into slavery,
-by a French devil incarnate, whom they call Montbars, and whom may
-heaven, in its mercy, cause to be eternally tormented—my good master
-took to his bed, and we weeping all around him, and blessing the
-saints, who, without doubt, had thus broken his heart, in order that
-they might take him to themselves, the worthy Bartholomew Moranté
-departed this life to enter into a better world where are neither
-spoilers nor stealers, nor doth there happen any manner of trouble or
-cross. His widow, whom still I serve, dwells here in this house, and
-places great confidence in me, looking up, although I say it, to my
-advice and counsels; for I am old in the world, and have seen much
-appertaining to domestic service, and am also much enlightened in
-visions by the holy saints, who are pleased to make my hours of sleep
-as profitable to my good patroness as my times of waking.’
-
-From this rambling discourse of the old gentleman, I saw plainly
-of what kidney he was—to wit, a very honest-hearted simpleton, who
-loved his mistress dearly, while she, if her steward spoke sooth, was
-probably as simple-minded as himself. But, desiring to know somewhat
-of the young lady, the serving-man broke out into raptures concerning
-her innocence and her beauty.
-
-‘Her name,’ quoth he, ‘thanks to the saints! is Joseffa—Joseffa
-Moranté—a rare brave name for a rare brave damsel. But she will
-change it sometime, mayhap. Nay, very soon—if all go right, and the
-saints will it.’
-
-So saying, the old fellow began to smirk and nod, and look as wise
-and as sly as he could, and then fell to chuckling to himself.
-
-‘The rarest match,’ he presently commenced again. ‘Her mother,
-having as I said great confidence in me, consulted with me on the
-matter. “Martin y Vesdras,” says she to me, “Joseffa is marriageable;
-and here hath come a suitor well-favoured and marvellously
-well-recommended, and a nobleman to boot. Thou wilt do well, Martin,
-to see him; nay, hold converse with him, and report to me your
-opinion.”
-
-‘But I, having no opinions save what the saints send me, went
-straight to bed and dreamed upon the matter. Never had I a more
-encouraging vision. Good Master Mariner, as I am a true man, St.
-Gieronimo himself appeared at the foot of the bed, holding a wedding
-ring, which he seemed to throw towards me with a very pleasant smile,
-and so when I woke I actually found the symbol upon the coverlid.’
-
-‘Truly,’ says I, ’ Martin, this was but little short of a miracle.’
-
-‘Master Mariner,’ quoth the simpleton, ‘I rejoice to hear you say so.
-So indeed think I, and so thinks my mistress, only——’
-
-‘What,’ cries I, ‘does any one refuse to believe the token?’
-
-‘Ay, verily,’ answered the old steward, ‘even Mistress Joseffa
-herself, who is in noways inclined, at the present time at least,
-to this wedding, and so she contends, half in mirth half in pretty
-pettishness—the saints guard her!—that the ring is not a marriage
-ring, but truly only one of the brass curtain rings which she sayeth
-dropped upon my nose in the night, and gave me my dream. “Look you,
-Martin,” says she, “the ring is plain, just like the other curtain
-rings.”
-
-‘“But look you again, Mistress Joseffa,” says I, “all wedding rings
-are plain, just like this ring.”
-
-‘But she, sir, in noways put down by my argument, answers, “Truly,
-but wedding rings are also gold, and this is brass, Master Martin.”’
-
-‘Well,’ says I, ‘how did you answer that consideration? Methought, it
-pushed you home.’
-
-‘Answer it,’ cried he, ‘I hope I know better than to dispute
-obstinately with the daughter of my good mistress. No, Master
-Mariner, I held my peace, as became me, being but a servant; yet I
-do, nevertheless, steadfastly believe the vision, and I hope that the
-saints will inspire the sweet Joseffa with kinder thoughts to her
-suitor, who is truly a goodly man and an honest, and what is better
-than both, favoured of St. Gieronimo.’
-
-Then I, making inquiries of the steward as to the young lady’s
-features and carriage, he answered that to-morrow my own eyes would
-inform me better than his tongue, which could in no way do justice
-to such a theme as the great virtues and loveliness of his charming
-young mistress, whose single fault was that she laughed at the
-wedding ring of St. Gieronimo. Soon after this, our conversation
-broke off, the steward telling me he would be with me betimes in
-the morning. I lay long awake that night, conjuring up visions of
-Joseffa; at length, as sleep was coming over me, I heard, or dreamed
-I heard, the low tinkle of a guitar, and a manly voice, as of a
-serenader singing to it beneath an outside balcony.
-
-‘The favoured suitor,’ I murmured, half asleep; and forthwith began
-to dream that I was his rival, and that Saint Gieronimo appeared
-again to explain that he meant the wedding ring with a view to my
-coming, and that Martin’s interpretation of the vision was quite
-erroneous.
-
-The morning came, and I was ushered into the presence of my most
-kind benefactors. They sat—the elder lady on a couch, the younger
-on a footstool at her feet—in a great lofty withdrawing-chamber,
-the walls and ceiling rarely carved, the floor of sweet-smelling
-wood, highly polished, and almost as slippery as ice, and the whole
-apartment darkened by blinds of a peculiar construction, which
-excluded the heat, but allowed the fresh breeze to pass in freely.
-As I advanced, the Señora Moranté held out her jewelled hand, which
-I kissed very respectfully. She was a tall, stately-looking dame,
-dressed in morning-robes, and her hair, which was beginning to turn
-grey, covered with festoons of black lace, gracefully arranged, and
-falling down upon her shoulders. But my eyes were, as the reader may
-guess, fixed with a far more delighted gaze upon Joseffa. She was,
-indeed, a beauty of the true Spanish mould. Her form vibrated, as
-it were, with a graceful suppleness which made her every movement a
-charm to see. Her oval face—lighted by eyes which alternately flashed
-and melted—was beaming, sometimes with the joyous rapture of gaily
-flushing spirits, sometimes, as it were, shaded by a grave expression
-of pretty coquettish modesty and bashfulness. Her lips were full and
-pouting, and every moment there came a merry smile upon them, with
-a sudden arching of her dark eyebrows, which quite enabled me to
-understand the sportive nature which laughed at poor Martin, with
-his ring of St. Grieronimo. She bowed slightly as I advanced, and
-then, flirting and twirling and shaking a fan made of gaily-coloured
-feathers before her face, stole rapid glances at me; all the while
-pouting her lips, and sometimes looking down to the ground, and then
-starting up, and whispering and laughing softly in her mother’s
-ear, or unto herself, playing all the while with one hand among her
-long black hair—her white fingers glancing nimbly amid the glossy
-clustering locks.
-
-The señora received me with a sort of goodnatured dignity, and
-bade me sit on a low seat hard by. She then began to inspect me, as
-I thought, as curiously as though I had been some sort of strange
-animal, muttering to herself, and sometimes whispering her daughter;
-to my no small embarrassment; all at once, she said—
-
-‘Young man, I fear me you are a heretic?’
-
-I replied softly that I was of the religion of my fathers.
-
-‘But you are a pirate,’ she commenced again; ‘and you put our people
-to death very cruelly, and you pillage our ships. See, what being a
-heretic leads you to. Perhaps it was very weak in me to save you, and
-I know not what father Anselmo will say when next I go to confession.’
-
-I answered that, far away in Scotland I had a mother, who I was sure
-would do for any poor hunted Spaniard what she had done for me, and
-that, though we did not worship in the same fashion, yet that never
-would my mother forget in her prayers the kind heart that had saved
-her son.’
-
-I spoke this very earnestly, for I felt what I said deeply, and
-kneeling down, I took the señora’s hand again, and kissed it. She
-paused a little time, and then asked, what made my countrymen and the
-French so vengeful against the Spaniards. Now, this was an argument
-which I had no will to enter into—seeing that such a debate could
-but breed angry feelings on both sides; and so I endeavoured to
-turn the matter off by saying, that it was the two nations, and not
-individuals, who made war—on account of the heritage of the new world.
-
-‘But, señor,’ said Joseffa, and all my nerves tingled as I heard her
-voice, ‘you are of a very cruel and vindictive nation; for when my
-poor father’s great bark, the Trinidada, was taken, all the sailors
-were struck down and murdered upon the deck.’
-
-To this I answered, that I understood that the Trinidada had been
-captured by Louis Montbars, a Frenchman; that I had myself been
-prisoner in the hands of that captain; and that it was only by a
-dangerous flight that I escaped being sold into slavery by him in the
-isle of Tortugas.
-
-This revelation all at once seemed to alter the position in which I
-stood in the favour of the ladies, who, up to that time, although
-they had, as I understood, received a good report—but from whence
-I could not guess—of my conduct before the alcaide—were yet partly
-prepossessed against me, as a heretic and a pirate of that class
-which had brought so much desolation on their house. So, presently,
-they desired to hear somewhat of my adventures, which I told them
-very faithfully—the narration occupying the greatest portion of the
-day. While I sat speaking, my eyes often encountered the dark orbs
-of Joseffa fixed on mine. Then would we both drop our glances to the
-ground, and my voice, despite myself, would falter, and a red blush
-would spring over the bright olive cheeks of the young Spanish lady,
-and her feather-fan would flutter more violently than before.
-
-That day I dined with my hosts. In the cool of the evening I
-walked with them in the garden; but at the board, and beneath the
-orange-trees, I saw but one face and one form. In my sleep the
-star-like eyes of Joseffa haunted me; her voice rang unceasingly in
-my brain. When I ventured to take her hand, mine trembled as though I
-were a palsied old man—when she left me, the salt of existence seemed
-to have lost its savour. I went and came musing. I took no pleasure
-in aught save what related to her. In short, I had fallen certain
-fathoms deep in love.
-
-And, verily, it was not wonderful. I lived in a state of existence so
-new, that it seemed to me, then, and seems to me still, a Dreamland—a
-long, sweet unreal vision. Consider what I was—a rude mariner,
-ever-brought up in the coarse company of rough and unpolished men,
-with hands fit to swing a lead-line, or tie a reef-point; with a
-voice good for hailing the fore-top in a gale of wind; but with
-neither hands nor voice trained for the soft requirements of a lady’s
-bower.
-
-I laugh, with a melancholy mirth, now, when I think of what my
-uncouthness must have been. Here was I a rough and round sailor—a
-fellow who had been kicked about in Scotch brigs, and buccaneering
-small craft all my days—to whose tongue the lingo of the forecastle
-came as my mother-speech; who had hardly slept but in a swinging
-hammock—ate but of lobscouse and sea-pie—sang but roaring
-sea-ballads, or thought but of storms and calms, and ships and rigs,
-with now and then a waking dream of old boyish days, of the Royal
-Thistle and the Balwearie Burn, or mayhap the memory of an ancient
-Scots legend, or a warm gush of feeling when I pondered on my old
-mother, by the ingle-nook in the fisher’s cottage, near Kirkleslie
-Pier. Such was I then, such my very nature, body and soul, and yet
-now did I find myself the lover of a gentle Spanish lady, walking
-with her through garden bowers, communing with her under shady
-verandahs, talking of things I hardly dreamt of even as lurking in
-the bottom of my soul. And she neither jeered at my port, nor flouted
-my rough speech. She loved to hear of my country, and when I told
-her our gallant tales of the Bruce, of how he was crowned King of
-Scotland, crowned not in an abbey, by no holy hand of priest, and
-without the ancient symbol of the sovereignty of the realm, but in
-a wilderness, with a circlet of gold hastily wrought out, and by
-the hands of a famous heroine, dear to the heart and memory of a
-Scot, for ever—the Countess of Marr—when, I say, I told such tales,
-Joseffa would hang, as it were, upon my lips, and then saying that
-Spain also had its great heroes and mighty men of old, would draw her
-fingers strongly across the thrilling strings of her guitar, and with
-flashing eye and widened nostril, sing the glorious ballads of her
-nation, of the battles between the Spanish chivalry and the Paynim
-Moors, of the conquest of Alhama, and the life and death of Diaz de
-Bivar, the peerless Cid.
-
-And so flew weeks away. I know not to this day how the Señora Moranté
-observed not what was passing in our minds. She had taken me into
-great favour, and consulted me much upon family matters, and upon
-her design to cross the ocean and return to Alicant; and often she
-hinted mysteriously at the noble husband her daughter would espouse
-after her return to Spain. This suitor I knew to be in Carthagena, I
-knew he ofttimes visited the house. Yet, upon these occasions, the
-mother managed somehow adroitly to receive him when I was not by.
-From Joseffa I could learn but this, that the gallant favoured by her
-mother was not loved by her; that she received him but to humour the
-fancies of her parent, who was but a weak, though good kind of woman;
-and finally, she said to me, in low tones, for her eyes were looking
-closely into mine, and her breath was warm upon my cheek,
-
-‘Do not regard him—Leonard, my own sailor, I will marry only you.’
-
-But a week before these sweet words were spoken, we had (the custom
-is of Scotland) broken together a crooked coin. Joseffa wore one half
-of it attached by a braid round her neck and next to her heart, and I
-wore the other.
-
-So, as I have said, weeks flew by; sometimes I thought sadly of my
-comrades, and wondered upon what seas the gallant Will-o’-the-Wisp
-was sailing; but these were only passing moments. My life was a
-long sweet dream, checkered only by such considerations as I have
-mentioned, and by doubtings and misgivings touching the strange
-suitor who persecuted Joseffa with his importunities.
-
-‘Tell me but his name,’ I would say; ‘bring me but face to face with
-him; I ask no more.’
-
-But she would reply, ‘Be tranquil, Leonard! You have my heart. My
-mother loves me well, and it pleases her to nurse herself in fancies
-which can never turn to reality. Before you arrived here, a ship
-sailed hence to Spain; she must be now upon the ocean again, with her
-bows hitherward. When that ship sails a second time, I trust well
-that my mother’s eyes will be opened, and that what is now passing
-will be remembered but as an idle cloud, which hath come and gone.’
-
-But I was not satisfied. And so I applied very earnestly to Martin,
-professing to consult him as to a vision with which the saints had
-blessed me, touching the wedding favoured of St. Gieronimo. All I
-could obtain from the old man was, that the cavalier, for certain
-private reasons, wished that his visits should be kept secret until
-the nuptials had actually been arranged.
-
-Now, all this appeared to me a most strange and needless complication
-of a simple matter, and, calling to mind certain words of Joseffa, I
-could not help wondering whether the cavalier held the same language
-to the mother as to the daughter. The allusions to the persecution
-which Joseffa was undoubtedly undergoing, out of deference to her
-mother’s foibles and prejudices, coming probably to an end when a
-certain vessel sailed for Spain, would seem to imply that in that
-vessel would also sail her tormentor; and, pondering upon this
-circumstance, a thought suddenly flashed upon me, which made me
-certain I had caught a clue to the mystery. As all this came up into
-my mind, my brow flushed and my blood boiled.
-
-‘Come what may of it,’ I swore, ‘the next time that this man crosses
-the threshold, ’tis I who will receive him.’ I hided my time warily
-and well. I watched; I lay in wait; not a motion of the old steward
-or of the señora but I followed; and the next day I had my will. I
-knew the mysterious suitor was in the house. I knew that the señora
-had gone to summon her daughter, who, I also knew, would be long of
-coming. Therefore, gathering up body and soul for the interview, as
-I had done once before for the torture, I burst hurriedly into the
-withdrawing room, and saw there, dangling his bonnet and playing with
-his sword-knot, the man I had expected to see—Don José!
-
-Making a great effort, I composed myself, and stood firm, looking at
-him, but not daring to allow my tongue to utter a sound. On his side,
-Don José showed not the slightest emotion, only a dark shadow seemed
-for a moment to pass over his face, but it went almost as soon as it
-had come; and then, stepping up to me, he said, in such a frank, open
-fashion, that I could hardly believe my ears:
-
-‘Hey, my old friend, the Scots Mariner! I am heartily glad to
-see thee again. I knew that thou hadst found refuge in this very
-hospitable mansion. And so, friend, thou hast doubled both upon
-blood-hound and alcaide. It was very well done, man. I gave
-thee a good character to the Señora Moranté, and I hope it hath
-availed thee. But indeed the ladies lately told me, that thou wert
-still here, behaving thyself most reasonably, for a pirate and
-a heretic—nay, that, in sooth, thou wert getting to be quite a
-favourite. A rare time for thee, Friend Buccaneer. How wilt thou like
-sea-fare and sea-company, after such an interlude?’
-
-‘Don José,’ said I, speaking in a low and tremulous voice, for very
-passion; ‘it were best that you leave this house.’
-
-‘Truly, friend,’ replied the cavalier—‘you are the least
-hospitable person within it. What may be the meaning, I pray, of a
-recommendation, which, in thy mouth, I find somewhat singular?’
-
-‘Don José,’ I replied, ‘you have saved my life. It is now in your
-hands again. I am a rough, untutored mariner, not skilled in your
-courtly ironical phrase,—I say again, you must leave this house, or
-I will drive you from it—you may return with officers and alguazils,
-but at any rate, you will not return in the character which now you
-falsely pretend to.’
-
-‘My good man,’ said Don José, still playing with his sword-knot,
-and, as he spoke, flinging himself on a sofa, and dangling his
-legs gracefully—‘My good man, have you ever, in the course of
-your buccaneering, come across a cut on the forehead from a well
-wielded piece of steel? Because if so, at certain seasons, the brain
-may still feel the smart. You ought to purge and bleed—my good
-pirate,—purge and bleed.’
-
-I was likely to lose my senses in reality at this cool effrontery,
-and so, going up close to the Spanish nobleman, I said—
-
-‘Remember, Don Ottavio y St. Jago, who is known to every duenna at
-the Court of Madrid—remember, your mutual bargain, and the message
-which you sent your friend by the mouth of Señor Davosa, a merchant,
-who has doubtless by this time sailed for Old Spain, on board of the
-galleon.’
-
-Don José started to his feet, as though a cannon-shot had been fired
-close to his ear. His tawny features were flushed with a sudden
-redness, and as he jumped up erect upon the floor, he drew his
-rapier, as though an armed enemy had leaped suddenly upon him. As for
-me, I thought it just as well to be run through where I stood, as to
-be dragged again to prison—again tortured and finally hanged. So I
-remained motionless, gazing upon him. He paused for a moment, with
-his arm upraised, as though to strike, and then suddenly lowering
-his weapon, he said—‘Have you nought wherewith to defend yourself?’
-I replied, that I was unarmed, as he saw, but that I was not afraid
-of dying, that he had already given me life, and that now he might
-himself revoke his gift. He seemed to pause again, to take inward
-counsel. His face, from being flushed, grew suddenly pale, and his
-features worked, and his lips quivered. At last he spoke—
-
-‘Eavesdropper!’ he cried, ‘you were lurking in your boat, beneath the
-cabin galleries of the galleon.’
-
-I answered, composedly, that I was no eavesdropper, but an adventurer
-who sought, as is common in war-time, to obtain information as to the
-designs of his enemy. He laughed scornfully, and then turning on his
-heel, sheathed his rapier with a clash. In an instant, however, he
-swung round again, with his fierce eyes all aflame.
-
-‘Ha!’ he exclaimed, ‘I see it—a rival. By all the gods, a rival!
-A successful rival! Good!—a jest worth telling. The blood of Old
-Castile against a tar barrel—and the tar the favoured fluid of the
-twain.’
-
-As he spoke thus—his hand again clutched the hilt of his rapier, but
-he withdrew it, with a loud angry ‘Pshaw!’—and strode, fuming, up and
-down the room. Then he paused, came close to me, and said—
-
-‘Most grateful mariner—most worthy pirate—a goodly return have
-you made to the man who gave you liberty and life. Why! thou
-heartless knave! were it not for me, you would long ago have swung a
-hundred-weight of carrion from a gallows, and now this—this is the
-gratitude thou showest.’
-
-‘Yes, Don José,’ I said, vehemently, ‘it is. To save a gentleman from
-committing a base action, is to make the worthiest recompence for a
-favour he has conferred.’
-
-The Spaniard looked at me from head to foot, raised his eyebrows, and
-gave a slight whistle.
-
-‘Truly, a pirate of a most moral breed—he reproves incontinence, he
-rebukes sin. Most righteous of Buccaneers, thou hast mistaken thy
-trade. Turn priest, man. Ha! I daresay you heard me tell the story of
-the diamond and pearls on the Virgin’s petticoat? Behold a career for
-thee. Get thee to the Cathedral on the Hill. To rob gaping Spaniards
-in a church is more profitable and more safe than to plunder fighting
-Spaniards on the sea. Turn priest, man. I warrant thee the rarest
-hand at the confessional.’
-
-‘Don José,’ I answered, ‘promise me, on your honour, to give up
-the wicked purpose with which you visit this house. You may then
-betray me to my enemies, and I swear to you, that not a word of what
-accidentally I overheard shall pass my lips.’
-
-He turned impetuously to me. ‘You know me not, mariner,’ he cried,
-vehemently. ‘Your life is safe for me. We Spaniards are not all of
-us alguazils!—human bloodhounds! Go! You have crossed my path, and
-chance has given you the advantage. But you have spoken well and
-acted well. I do not blame you—I think well of you. Once I would
-myself have done what you have done; nay, perhaps so would I still.
-But, caramba! Why put myself in a heat about such a trifle. Win her
-and wear her, man! The stakes are yours.’
-
-Don José took two or three turns from one end of the apartment to the
-other, I still remaining motionless where I had first addressed him;
-then suddenly stopping, he said, ‘If ever in future years you visit
-Madrid, seek me out, and I will be your friend.’
-
-Just then, the Señora Moranté entered. ‘Don José,’ she said, ‘I have
-looked everywhere for Joseffa, but——’
-
-Here she observed me, and suddenly became silent. Don José went up to
-her, and took her hand.
-
-‘Señora,’ he said, ‘you will think me fickle, but I have become
-convinced, that in Joseffa’s hand, should I be fortunate enough to
-secure it, I should find no heart. The saints would prosper no such
-union, señora. What I say I have full warrant for believing. Señora,
-adieu! Here is your persecuted Scotch mariner. Make much of him—he
-is a leal man and true. I told you that I thought so, now I know it.
-Adieu, señora. Adieu, my flower of pirates. May Heaven prosper thee!
-Be moral—and a Buccaneer!’
-
-And so saying, with a reverence the most graceful and profound, Don
-José stepped gaily from the room. Oh, heart of man, what strange
-wild tunes thou playest—what discords mingling with and marring thy
-harmonies—what harmonies mingling with and attuning thy discords!
-Courteous and rude, paltry and noble, magnanimous and base. A man can
-be all these in an hour, in a breath, the grandest and the foulest
-thing in nature!
-
-Now, that I have told at length the strange chances which brought
-Don José and I face to face so often, and in such curious relations
-to each other at Carthagena, I would fain pass quickly over the
-story of my after stay in that city. The history leads to but a sad
-ending. Often and often, since I left the Spanish main, in rough
-dark middle watches, as well as in soft and balmy nights, when my
-ship stole through a waveless and shining sea, have I flown in fancy
-back to those bright days of hope and love—often have I meditated
-and pondered, until the very image of Joseffa has seemed to waver
-in the air and smile upon me, until the well-remembered tones of
-her voice have sounded audibly in mine ear amid the dash of waves,
-or the rustle of the swelling canvas. Sometimes crouching alone in
-the rocking top, with straining ropes and surging sails around me,
-I have peopled that airy platform with the household of the old
-merchant’s dwelling at Carthagena. The señora Moranté has pleaded
-with me, urging me that I should abandon my heresies and become
-a true son of the ancient church—the prating Martin has told his
-visions of angels and of saints, and Joseffa—Joseffa, who wore the
-token of our love upon her heaving heart, has looked up with her dark
-eyes and her smiling lips into my face.
-
-Vain phantoms all! the stately señora, the garrulous old steward,
-Joseffa herself—the sea entombs them all! The crooked coin I gave my
-love lies deep with her in caves which no line hath ever plumbed. The
-ocean is the most inscrutable of sepulchres. I know not, and no man
-knows, the place of their resting. The breeze was fair, and the sea
-smooth, which bore from Carthagena the ship in which they embarked to
-return to Spain. She was a stately merchantman, and as she left the
-port cannon thundered and church bells clashed from echoing steeples.
-Then spreading her fair white wings to the wind, and towering in her
-pride over the fleet of small craft which joyously, with shout and
-blessing, convoyed her out to sea—the good ship disappeared, holding
-her steady course for home. Since that day, no man has seen her or
-aught of her. No token of the ill-starred craft has been driven on
-any coast, or picked up on any sea; no bottle or flask, carrying a
-despairing message from dying to living men, has floated to any human
-hand. The fierce fire may have seized on her—the starting of a plank
-may have brought on the fatal leak. A sudden tornado may have crushed
-her under the howling waters. Beaten and belaboured by a long-blowing
-gale, she may at length have succumbed to the force of roaring winds
-and seas. God only knows her fate. She never came to land. She
-joined that mighty navy which rests, manned by bleaching bones, far
-down beneath those good keepers of secrets—the waves and swells of
-the ocean; those waves on which gallant fleets and living men ride
-buoyantly, joyously, all unwitting and unthinking that, mayhap, a
-mile below the keel, rise the topmasts of what was once a merrily
-bounding ship, now peeping forth amid the green branches and slowly
-waving boughs of those great forests which learned men say grow at
-the bottom of the sea.
-
-Sleep well, Joseffa, in your mystic entombment! It was a long tryste
-which we gave each other. When we parted we agreed to meet again in
-Spain, and there, being married, you would have sailed with me to see
-that Scotland of which we so often spoke. Man proposes—God disposes.
-It was not to be so. Although years had gone by, and I knew well
-that the ship which bore you had perished, still I kept the tryste
-at Alicant. I stood upon the sea-stretching quay upon the day and
-the hour we had covenanted. I kept the tryste as though it were a
-duty of my faith; it was soothing to my spirit to do so: but not
-even a shadowy phantom of my beloved flitted to my side. There were
-loud voices and busy throngs around. It is in the silence and the
-dusk of evening and of dawn that best we seem to see each other. And
-even these moments, what are they?—Times of musing, idle phantasy.
-People laugh at them and at me, and, perhaps, with reason. Who,
-indeed, would believe, seeing the grizzled locks and weather-beaten
-visage and horny hands of the man who is now captain of the Scotch
-brig ‘Royal Thistle,’ why so called we know well—that he, that jolly
-yarn-telling mariner—that tough old tangled lump of sea-weed—can yet
-remember the day when the flush of loving blood was hot within him?
-Who will credit that that pair of oozy, blinking eyes can yet see,
-as it were, looking into them bright and loving human orbs, long ago
-turned into pearls beneath the deep waters; and, finally, who will
-conceive that that square-built, stout-paunched veteran of the ocean
-was once a slim youth, with flowing love-locks, whom the voice of
-beauty thrilled, whose tears, the well-remembered tones of that voice
-will still provoke to flow?
-
-I have here shot a-head in my story, and anticipated other things.
-Were I, however, to have persevered in narrating, point by point,
-the adventures of my Buccaneer life, I should, perhaps, have left
-the tale of my early love but half told. I have, therefore, thought
-it better at once to make an end with that sad history. In a few
-words—Joseffa and I were betrothed, and her mother blessed us.
-Marriage then was impossible, for further claims against the father
-were every day arising, and when all were finally adjusted, the
-mother and daughter would be nearly as poor as myself. At length,
-all such matters being settled, they sailed for Spain, as I have
-narrated. Long before that time, however, I had quitted Carthagena,
-after solemnly engaging to meet my betrothed in three years at the
-city of her family, at Alicant.
-
-During that time I trusted well to amass treasures. The days whereof
-I write were those in which a single lucky capture made a fortune—in
-which one daring assault upon a Spanish battery might send the
-conqueror rolling home upon ingots of Indian gold. God forgive us
-if we were thieves and robbers of the sea; such we did not account
-ourselves. The Spaniards loudly swore that no European banner but
-their own should stream upon the trade-winds of the tropic—that no
-Europeans but themselves should traffic with those golden regions of
-the west. Upon this quarrel we fought, and—to the death. I never drew
-trigger upon a Spanish ship, that I did not deem myself as helping to
-unshackle the fettered enterprise of Protestant Europe. Why should
-we not, as well as its first discoverers, share in the spoils of the
-new world? The Spaniards held but inconsiderable portions of the
-soil—islands lay desert, great stretches of continent were tenanted
-only by handfuls of savages; but the Spaniard would keep all to
-himself. We did not admit the claim, and hence arose the Buccaneers.
-I said, that these adventurers ofttimes made a great fortune in a
-day. In many cases, these masses of wealth were no sooner won than
-they were lost. A week in Jamaica was quite sufficient to dissipate
-the spoils of the luckiest cruize. What brave sabres won, cogged
-dice lost; what gallant but foolish men amassed, at peril of their
-lives, infamous women squandered on brazen orgies. Little indeed
-of the wealth wrested by Englishmen from the Spaniards turned to
-happiness and content in the captor’s grasp. Well was it said, by
-an ancient Buccaneer, that gold ill-won by Spaniards, and ill-spent
-by Englishmen, enriched the latter no more than the former; that in
-the end the spoil slipped from the hands which grasped, as well as
-from those which held it; and that after all the fighting—all the
-suffering of these long wars—the yellow metal, for as much as it
-benefited either party, might well have been left in the mines by the
-Spaniards, or flung into the sea by the English.
-
-Still, as I have said, there were great exceptions to the general
-rule, and of these I trusted to prove one. Therefore, when last we
-saw each other—when last I felt Joseffa’s form clasped to mine, I
-whispered in her ear, that I well trusted in three years at Alicant,
-to come to her, not a poor-hearted fugitive, but a well-endowed
-lover. And thus we parted. When I write these latter words I doubt
-not but that I have penned all necessary to be said, to picture the
-scene by those who take interest in such passages. We parted, and we
-never met again!
-
-Interest had been made with the captain of a small coasting craft, a
-good fellow, and a friend of Martin’s, bound eastward to the Pearl
-Fishery, to take me along with him. Once at sea again, I trusted
-speedily to find means to transfer me to a deck above which floated
-the battle-banner of England. The Pearl fisherman sailed to join the
-fleet by night. Nearly four months had by that time elapsed, since I
-was captured in Carthagena harbour. Don José had obtained a reversal
-of his sentence of banishment, and had sailed for Spain. Concerning
-the alcaide and his clerk, I heard nothing; but Captain Guzman I
-saw as, in the gathering darkness of the evening, I hurried to the
-beach—lurking, like a troubled spirit, round the shop of the Jew
-money-lender.
-
-Joseffa had wept upon my neck—her mother had blessed me—Martin had
-told me of a special vision, in which St. Gieronimo had appeared and
-promised to watch over me!
-
-‘God bless them all!’ I had not thought shame to weep in saying it.
-
-Another half-hour and the ocean was again beneath my feet.
-
-‘Hurrah, for a new cruize! Hurrah, for new shipmates! Hurrah, for the
-riches of the ocean! Hurrah, for the pearl banks of the Rio de la
-Hacha!’
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXIII.
-
-HOW WE SAIL TO JOIN THE PEARL FLEET, AND THE NEGRO DIVER’S STORY.
-
-
-The night I sailed from Carthagena was as starry and still as that
-in which I entered the bay. Negro fishermen, in canoes, again sung
-rude ditties as they shot their lines for pisareros—the rigging of
-stately merchantmen again cut with many dark and interlaced lines the
-sparkling sky—and again, and for the last time, I heard the bells of
-the rich Monastery of the Hill come pealing over the music of the
-surf.
-
-The night-breeze was very faint and feeble, so ‘Out sweeps’ was
-the word; and presently all the crew, myself among the rest, were
-tugging at our great heavy oars, and slowly urging the small bark
-out to sea. We were not alone upon the water—close to us, another
-vessel of our own rig and size, and bound upon the same voyage, was
-making head in the same way—the blades of her long oars sparkling
-in the sea, and both crews singing and shouting cheerily to each
-other. Every year there sails from Carthagena to the pearl banks
-of the Rio de la Hacha, about a dozen or a dozen and a half small
-vessels, called the Pearl Fleet. The greater part of the squadron had
-already gone, with a man-of-war to guard them. We were laggards, but
-Garbo, so the captain of our bark was named, trusted in a few days
-to join his comrades upon the banks. The Pearl Fleet is composed of
-small ships generally used for coasting. When I describe our craft,
-called the Pintado, the reader will have a good notion of all. She
-was, then, a two-masted vessel, of about thirty tons burthen, very
-shallow, and of great beam. Her mould was beautifully designed,
-sharp and wedge-like at the bows, with her sides towards the gunwale
-gently curved, as it were, like the lips of a bell, so that let her
-lie over before a smart gale, as much as she would, it was next to
-impossible to capsize her. She was but partially decked, towards
-the stem and stern, having an open space amidships, which was used
-when fishing for heaping the oysters in. Her crew consisted of four
-Spanish seamen, the captain, and two negro divers, of whom more anon.
-Thus there were eight of us in all, and we lived stowed away as we
-could best manage it, in the two little choky cabins, forward and
-aft, there being no distinction made between captain and crew. My
-up-bringing was not, as you may guess, much calculated to make me
-squeamish about where I lived and where I lay, but I confess, that
-the sweltering holes, all greasy and foul, with their brown swarms of
-cockroaches, and every now and then their stray centipedes, in which
-the Spanish sailors ate their garlic-smelling messes, and in which
-they flung themselves down often in their wet frowzy steaming clothes
-to sleep—I say these cabins were so horribly choky and miserable
-that, day and night, I kept upon deck, although, from the sharpness
-of the bark’s model forward, and the quickness of her pitch, she was
-very wet. Indeed, when it blew stronger than common, we shipped so
-much water, that we had to cover the open waist with a species of
-grating on which tarpaulings were stretched tightly, otherwise we
-would speedily have filled and gone down. The bark carried two tall,
-slim masts, raking very much aft, and supporting a couple of large
-lug or square sails, over which two broad, but low topsails, could be
-hoisted. Round her decks, at stem and stern, was a low iron rail, but
-no bulwark, so that the washing of the sea over us, in a breeze, was
-almost incessant.
-
-Garbo, the captain, was a good fellow, and a prime seaman, and
-he only on board knew that I was an Englishman, and what my real
-intentions were. The rest of the crew were told that I was a mariner
-of the Low Countries, who had also served in Spanish ships at home.
-They were a wild-looking set of fellows, with short trousers, not
-reaching much below the knee, broad leathern belts, in which were
-stuck formidable knives, and round their heads they wore yellow silk
-kerchiefs, over which they clapped broad straw hats during the heat
-of the day. All of them carried crucifixes of a black wood ornamented
-with gold, and if they did not pray much to the saints, at least
-they swore sufficiently by them. The two negroes took no part in the
-management of the ship, except it might be now and then lending a
-hand to their shipmates when a rope required an extra strain. One
-of them was very tall and gaunt, the other was short and stout. The
-latter, who was called by some common Spanish name, which I forget,
-was, or pretended to be, a Christian. He had a crucifix slung round
-his neck by a bit of rope yarn, and gabbled away about the saints
-like the European part of the crew. Further, he was quite ‘Hail
-fellow, well met,’ with the Spaniards. He played a sort of wooden
-drum, and sung strange uncouth songs of his country to them, and
-sometimes he would mimic the manners and voice of some one of the
-Spaniards very skilfully, and to the great delight of the rest. In
-fact, he was a fat, little, good-natured, hearty soul, with a grin
-almost always upon his black mug, and, except when he was asleep, his
-chattering tongue never lay still. He would go gambolling about the
-deck like an overgrown monkey, whooping, and grinning, and singing,
-so that not a soul on board but he would set at last to laughing as
-loudly as himself. His comrade was a man of a very different sort,
-and him I would describe particularly. He was the blackest negro I
-ever saw, not having anything of the brown copper colour which some
-of that people and the Indians show. On the contrary, his skin was
-of a most sooty black hue, without the least redness of tinge. I
-have seen many big and strong men, but a vaster, a more gaunt, yet
-sinewy form, than that of this black, saw I never. He was more than
-six feet high; his great spreading shoulders were lumps of bone and
-hardened muscle, and his huge chest rose and fell so slowly, that
-he seemed to breathe but half as often as other men on board. His
-limbs were immensely gaunt and spare, and nothing but his great
-splay feet, which covered more than two streaks of the deck, could
-support the pile of bone and sinew which they bore erect. The face of
-the diver was most ill-favoured and lowering. It was a broad, flat
-visage, like the face of a grim and grisly idol. Just under the low,
-wrinkled forehead, two little pig eyes winked forth, half hidden by
-the patches of eyebrow which scowled in hairy folds above them. The
-corners of the fat blubber lips were drawn down with a most sour and
-evil expression, and all round them, and on the chin, were ragged
-sprouts of beard, like flakes of black wool stuck upon the grisly
-visage. Such was the tall diver, who was called by his African name
-of Wooroo. His speech was broken Spanish, which he did not speak half
-so well as his countryman, the short negro. But, in truth, he seldom
-spoke at all, being generally squatted on his hams in some remote
-corner of the vessel, where he would pass hours muttering to himself.
-He wore a pair of tattered old breeches, and upon his naked chest,
-fastened round his neck, there lay a sort of amulet, or charm, made
-of feathers, stuck through a ball of hard baked clay, crammed into a
-rude wooden case full of uncouth carvings. He was a worshipper of Ob,
-and this was his fetish.
-
-‘Look at that hangdog thief Wooroo,’ said Garbo to me the second
-afternoon we were at sea. ‘That fellow has just two good qualities.
-He is the best diver who ever went into the sea, and he is tractable
-to me who am his owner. I took him from the mines among the
-mountains, and the animal, after his sort, is grateful. For, in
-truth, I believe that he is amphibious in his nature, and that the
-water is as necessary for him that he may live, as is land, and,
-perhaps, a little more so.’ In answer to my further inquiries, the
-captain said that he was a slave, brought from the Guinea coast,
-where of late a great many negroes had been delivered up bound by
-tribes hostile to them, and sold to Spaniards, Englishmen, Frenchmen,
-and others, who employed them in those sorts of work in the Indies,
-which white men cannot perform and live. Soon after this, imagining,
-from the sombre and brooding look of this savage, that he could if
-he pleased tell us some story of his nation and of his captivity
-which would be worth hearing, I communicated my thought to Garbo.
-The captain laughed. ‘What can the savage have to say,’ quoth he,
-‘but that some other savage fetched him a blow on the head with a
-war-club, or battle-axe, and then sold him to some Spanish trader for
-a cup of strong waters? But you shall be gratified: that is, if the
-monster chooses to unloose his tongue.’
-
-That night, the captain keeping the first watch, the weather being
-clear, and we and our consort sliding slowly over the long swells
-of the sea, the captain called the negro aft to where we sat upon
-the deck. The savage came with his usual slouching gait and scowling
-visage.
-
-‘Wooroo,’ quoth the captain, ‘we want to hear something about you;
-where you were born, and how you came hither.’
-
-The gigantic African only stared.
-
-‘Come, now,’ says Captain Garbo, ‘tell us your story, Wooroo—tell us
-about what you were in Africa, and what you did there.’
-
-The black at last opened his blubber lips, and replied, in broken
-Spanish, which I may render into English thus: ‘What am me to you?
-What you want hear about me for?’
-
-‘Never mind that, Wooroo,’ says the captain, ‘if we have a fancy to
-hear you speak. I will give you brandy, man.’
-
-The eyes of the negro glistened, and Captain Garbo winking at me,
-went on: ‘You shall be drunk, Wooroo; drunker than you ever were
-before, Caramba! so drunk that you can’t lie flat even without
-holding on by the mast.’
-
-It was pitiful to see how the brute-man shook himself with pleasure,
-and how his features worked.
-
-‘You make me very drunk—dead drunk?’ he grunted.
-
-‘As dead as though you were smothered in a brandy cask, you
-two-legged hog,’ returned the captain; ‘and what’s more, you shall
-have a draught to wet your whistle, and set your tongue loose at
-once.’ So saying, the Spaniard disappeared down the narrow hatch,
-and presently emerged, bearing a large leathern bottle, with three
-drinking mugs, one of which he filled with hot, strong brandy; the
-savage tossed it off and held out the vessel for more.
-
-‘No, no,’ said Garbo; ‘you shall not get drunk until we have the
-story out of you. Come, heave a-head!—heave a-head!’
-
-The black at this began to speak. First, he discoursed in a
-monotonous tone, all the while eyeing the brandy, and evidently
-thinking of it. But presently, as he proceeded, he warmed over the
-tale, and spoke with emphasis, and often in a loud, fast tone, making
-violent gesticulations with his black, brawny arms, until, at length,
-as his excitement increased, he would, every now and then, burst
-from the broken Spanish, in which he, no doubt, found it difficult
-to clothe his thoughts, into his own tongue, a strange, husky
-sputtering, rising, as it were, from his very stomach; but being
-promptly admonished on these occasions that we were not savages,
-and understood not the gabble of his coast, he would stop, ask for
-a little brandy, and having drunk it, resume again his narrative in
-such Spanish as he could speak. I will try to give in English some
-imitation of his words; only the reader must remember that they
-seemed doubly strange to me, hearing them, as I did, in the harsh,
-deep tones of the savage, and marking his glistening teeth, and
-white, staring eyeballs, and clenched fists wildly waved around while
-he spoke. Somewhat in this fashion ran his tale.
-
-
-The Story of the Negro Diver.
-
-‘I come from across the sea, and I am a slave. I dive into the
-water, and I bring up shell-fish, with white stones, which Spaniards
-worship. I am a great diver, and I can kill sharks with the sharp
-knife I carry in my hand. I was born in a wood, near a river. I curse
-them who carried me away. I make fetish to curse them. I ask the big
-Spirit that lives in fever mists to torment them. They are not alive,
-but bad wishes follow dead men to where they go. I helped to kill
-them, but still they carried me away across the sea, and I am here!
-
-‘I was born in a wood near a river. The trees grew in the water, and
-the slime of the water was oily at their roots. At night a hot mist
-came—very damp. Sometimes no moon, no stars, shine through that mist.
-It is the breath of the spirit of that land, and it kills strangers
-who come from afar. In the woods it was very dark, the branches kept
-the sun out; but near the river were huts, and round them corn grew
-and maize, for there the trees were burnt with fire, and the sun came
-hot—hot. My father was a warrior, and could slay his foes. He was
-strong, and had a great fetish. His war-club was heavy, and his bow
-was long, and his arrows hit the mark. My mother toiled, she reaped
-and baked, she thatched the hut, she paddled the canoe, she was
-strong. If she grew tired, my father lifted his war-club and then she
-worked on. In the hut was a broad bed of leaves, also calabashes to
-drink from, spears and clubs, and tools of iron. Also knives and an
-axe, which white men made. Also a god of palm-wood, with a necklace
-of wild beasts’ teeth. One hour from the hut, the brown river met the
-sea: there was a bay there, and many huts. Where the river met the
-sea were rocks: canoes could go from the salt-water to the fresh,
-but not ships, because of the rocks, on which were white waves, very
-fierce and high. In a big hut near the sea, the king lived, with
-all his wives and slaves. He was a great king, and made war upon
-other kings. My father went to these wars, but I stayed in the hut
-at home. When I was yet little, I learned to dive and to swim, and
-to paddle a canoe. I loved the water better than the woods. I loved
-the brown river, and the sea which tossed, and heaved. If the waves
-filled the canoe, it was nothing to me; I laughed and swam. If a
-great root of a tree in the brown slimy river upset the canoe, it was
-nothing to me; I laughed and swam. I did not fear the shark out in
-the blue water; I could dive under him when he turned upon his back
-to swallow me, and his teeth glistened in white rows. I did not fear
-the muddy crocodile in the river, and in the silent creeks, black
-and deep, which he loves: his back is hard, but his belly is soft,
-and I could drive a knife into him, so that he would lash his scaly
-tail and die. I tell you I could swim on the water like birds which
-live there, and I could dive like the fishes which are beneath. My
-father could swim and he could dive, but I could swim further and
-dive deeper. My father called me the “Long-breathed,” and when ships
-came to where the river joins the sea, I dived down from them, and
-the mariners gave me cloth and nails. Then I was happy; I had enough
-to eat, and oil to anoint me and make my limbs supple and strong, and
-a fetish which was very good.
-
-‘Soon came a great ship to where the river met the sea, and the men
-of our nation and the king went on board to trade. We had oil to
-give them, and the teeth of great beasts, and the dust of gold all
-glittering, which merchants brought from where the sun rises. But the
-captain said to the king, I not want palm-oil, nor teeth, nor gold.
-I want men, I want slaves, and I will buy them; not palm-oil, nor
-teeth, nor gold. When the king heard this, he went to war, and the
-warriors of my nation went with him. There was a battle, likewise
-many huts burnt, but the captain gave the king guns, and he returned
-with many slaves, men and women—for bows and arrows are not so good
-to fight with as guns, which shoot thunder. Then the slaves were sent
-on board the great ship, and the captain gave us strong drink, and
-we were drunk and happy, and we said we would go to war and bring
-more slaves.
-
-‘So afterwards this was our trade. I likewise went to war—I
-likewise made slaves. We went many days from the sea, to where
-there were other nations. We had guns, and they had but bows and
-arrows, likewise lances, and clubs of wood which fire had hardened.
-Therefore, many were killed, and many were slaves, and we kept them
-until ships came, and then sold them, and they were taken away over
-the sea; but we were rich and powerful, and had plenty of strong
-drink, which we loved; though many died of it.’
-
-‘As you will, Wooroo,’ says Captain Garbo, interrupting him, ‘if you
-only get enough of it.’
-
-‘Give some now,’ answered the negro. He drank off a small mugful, and
-went on, with more and more animation, as follows:—
-
-‘Once a ship came, and she waited for slaves outside the rocks,
-where the sea burst white. Then I had a hut and a wife, and slaves
-of my own, and lived near where the king lived, and he knew that I
-was a warrior, and exceeding skilful in the water. One night the
-sky was black—black—and the sea moaned like a slave that moans for
-his country and his wife, and there were sounds amid the branches
-of the big trees; also birds sang strangely, and the frogs croaked
-very loud from the marsh where they lived. Therefore, I knew that a
-great wind was coming to the land, from far off in the sea; and when
-I lay in my hut upon blankets, and listened, the storm blew loud,
-and I heard the great noise of the waves. In the morning, the sun
-was red in the sky, and I looked and saw the ship that was waiting
-for slaves, and she was tossed upon the waves, and the white men
-were waving their arms to us, who stood upon the shore. Not far from
-the ship were great rocks, and we knew that if she struck upon such
-rocks, she would break, and the white men would be drowned. But for
-a long time she was safe, because heavy anchors and strong ropes
-held her in her place: but the wind was great, and the ropes broke:
-then the white men cried with a loud shout, and the ship struck upon
-the rocks and was broken, and the white men drowned. In the night,
-the wind went to sleep and the stars shone, and on the morrow the
-sun was hot and bright upon the sea. So, soon we went to the broken
-ship; there were great treasures there of iron and cloth, and powder,
-which we dried, and casks of strong drink. There was more iron and
-cloth, and strong drink, than we could get for many slaves, won at
-many battles. Therefore we were glad that the rope broke, and the
-white men were drowned, because we had all. After this, many ships
-came, but great winds did not come, and we went to war, and my father
-was killed; but for all the slaves we brought, we did not get so
-much cloth, and iron, and powder, and strong drink, as we got when
-the ship was broken, and the white men drowned. At this the king was
-angry—I was angry: all the warriors of my nation were angry—and when
-a great ship came again, the king went into the wood to an Obi man
-that lived there, and asked him that he would make a fetish, so that
-a wind would arise out of the sea, and break the ship, that we might
-have all. The Obi man was good. He answered in these words—“I will
-make a fetish and give it to Wooroo. Great ropes hold the ship, but
-sharp knives can cut great ropes. Then a small wind will break the
-ship upon the rock. The white men fire at canoe, if canoe go near the
-ropes; but Wooroo a great diver—Wooroo a great swimmer—Wooroo has
-a sharp knife—Wooroo can dive deep down below the sea, and cut the
-ropes.”
-
-‘Then the king told me what the Obi man said, and I was glad, and
-sharpened my knife, and waited for a wind. The men of my nation knew
-it too, and we were glad, and said that the Obi man was wise. At
-last a wind came strong over the sea, and rattled the boughs of the
-forest, and the waves were white on the rocks. Then I went into the
-sea to swim and dive and cut the ropes. The surf was wild, but I
-am a great swimmer, and the surf could not drown me; and so I swam
-away out from the coast. I swam long. When I sank down into the
-valley between the waves, I could only see water—not land, nor the
-ship. Thus I passed to windward of the ship. If they saw my head,
-they thought it was a piece of wood, or a bird, or the head of some
-creature that lives in the sea. At length I was near the ship, and I
-saw the great rope from her bows going down into the water. I looked
-what way the rope went—it was under me. I drew my knife—I took a long
-breath—I dived. Down many fathoms I saw the rope; it stretched dimly
-out in the green sea. I clutched it; it shook—it trembled. Sometimes
-it slackened—sometimes it jerked out like an iron bar. I clung to
-it. The sea heaved and twisted me round and round it; but the knife
-was very sharp—my arm was very strong. The knife was half through
-the rope, when there came a jerk through all its strands, and it was
-torn asunder. One part was wrested out of my grasp, the other sank
-slowly into the sea. I rose up to the surface. I was almost spent;
-I swam faintly; I rested on the rolling sea. Then from the top of a
-wave I looked at the ship; she was already near the rock, and her
-side was to the waves. Men were in the rigging and among the ropes;
-they strived to loose the sails, but they had no time. The ship
-struck—the waves went over her—the masts fell—the crew were drowned!
-As I swam to land, I heard the people of my nation—how they shouted
-and were glad! That ship fared like the others—she broke, and we had
-the spoil. The powder, the cloth, the iron, and all things which we
-valued. Only three white men were saved, and we made them slaves.
-We sent them up the dark river, and into the dark woods far from
-the sea. They cried, and were in despair. They were sold to another
-nation, and we had the riches and rejoiced.’
-
-‘You infernal villain!’ cried Garbo. ‘The fellow talks of wrecking
-ships and drowning men by his devilish treachery, as if the tale were
-of building churches and saying masses.’
-
-‘I say truth,’ replied the negro. ‘Give me more strong drink.’ The
-captain shrugged his shoulders, and refilled the savage’s cup. The
-barbarian, whose eyes now began to gleam like a wild cat’s, broke out
-into a hoarse, guttural laugh, so savage and strange, that the watch
-on the forecastle called out to know what the noise was.
-
-‘It is only Wooroo singing,’ answered the captain. ‘Go on, Wooroo.’
-The negro, who was now getting excited by his story and the drink,
-needed no spurring.
-
-‘Ha! ha!’ he began, with that horrid laugh again. ‘Two ships come
-after. Two times I sharpened my knife; two times I went into the sea;
-two times I cut the great rope, and the ships struck the rocks and
-were broken. Some of the white men were drowned. Those who were not,
-we sold, and they were taken away, many days’ journey to the rising
-sun, and there will be until they die, as I am, slaves.
-
-‘But we were wealthy and great. The king was powerful. He had more
-carabines, more iron, and more cloth than any king before. Strong
-drink ran amongst us like water in a river. We drank, we yelled, we
-whooped, we flung brands from the fire among the huts, and they were
-burned. Evil demons lived in those casks, and when we drank the fiery
-drinks, they entered in unto us and made us mad, and no man knew his
-brother. We fought among the burning houses, and the charred rafters
-were wet with blood. At length there came a ship to which we had
-already given slaves. We went aboard. I was on board with the king.
-We went into the great cabin, and they gave us more strong drink.
-They heard of four ships having been broken on the rocks hard by, and
-they asked us how it was. We said that a wind came up out of the sea,
-and that the ships were broken. They then asked us where the white
-men were, and we said that they were all drowned in the sea. On that
-they gave us more strong drink, and fires began to flash before our
-eyes. It was sweet drink, sweeter than ever we had tasted, and we
-drank greedily. The white men encouraged us, but they did not drink
-themselves, and they talked, of the ships that were broken. But we
-were getting mad, and we knew no more what we did. So the white men
-said that, if the king’s people were cunning, many more ships would
-be broken, and the king’s people would be rich. Then we fell into the
-snare, because we were mad with the strong drink, and we yelled out,
-and danced, and told the white men that they were but fools, and I
-drew out my knife, and I said: “Look here. This knife cut the great
-ropes that went down to the bottom of the sea, and the ships were
-broken. I cut the great ropes. I have a strong fetish. I am a great
-diver and a great swimmer.” After this I remember nothing, but that I
-was asleep, and that I awoke. It was in a dark place, very hot, and
-I could scarcely breathe. On my arms and legs were mighty chains.
-I called out, and a voice answered me in the darkness. It was the
-voice of the king, and he said, “I am chained, I know not where.” We
-shouted, and screamed, and clanked our chains, and then when we lay
-still, we felt the prison we were in move with a regular motion, and
-we knew that we were in a ship upon the sea. So, white men came with
-lanterns, and they told us we were slaves. We roared and howled at
-them, and spit upon them, but our chains would not allow us to rise
-and kill them. Therefore they laughed, and asked me if I would swim
-and dive and cut the great rope that held the ship to the bottom of
-the sea, so that the king’s people might be rich. First, we trusted
-in our fetishes, but they did not help us; and the king said: “Once
-go ashore, and me catch the Obi man, and send the tum-tum drum
-through the wood, and the people come, and me burn the Obi man for a
-sacrifice; me burn him with fire, and torment him till he die.” But
-we did not go ashore—we were slaves. Then other slaves come, men and
-women, and lay down in the dark with us. The white men were there
-with whips and sticks, and they tormented us, until we lay so that we
-were one great lump of human flesh. All through the ship, oh! there
-was the heat, and the stench, and the sweat, and the roarings! There
-was no light but from two little hatchways with gratings, and square
-bits of light came down there; but I was far from them, and the air
-I breathed was more foul than the mist fever that comes up out of the
-swamp with the smell of the rotten mud.’
-
-The poor devil told this part of his strange tale with a visible
-shudder. He went on.
-
-‘The ship sailed away, and there were waves very rough, and the
-slaves lay sick, rolling over each other, roaring and fighting to
-get near the hatchways. But white men, with iron bars, struck them,
-and drove them back. The white men struggled backwards and forwards,
-and beat and slashed the slaves with iron bars and knives. They
-carried lanterns at first, but the fire went out in the bad air and
-the stench. The place was only as high as half a man; there were
-hundreds and hundreds driven into it. The smoke of our bodies rose
-out of the hatchways. We struggled and tore each other with hands and
-teeth, because of the agony of sickness and smothering. We coughed,
-and gasped, and panted, and dashed ourselves here and there in our
-chains. Soon many died. The white men dragged out the corpses and
-took them away. In our struggles, we kicked the dying beneath our
-feet. Sometimes they clasped our legs, and tried to scratch or bite.
-The corpses were cold and soft beneath us, and all around was slime,
-and dirt, and air that was rotten, and one stench of corruption and
-of death.
-
-‘In half a moon, more than half of the slaves were dead and thrown
-overboard. The king was yet alive; when he came on board, he was
-oily and fat, but now his bones were sticking out like knots and
-splinters, and he was covered with sores, as a leopard with spots.
-We lived on the flour of cassava and water. White men came down with
-great baskets of it mixed, and we plunged in our hands and drew out
-lumps of leaven, and ate. We did not now fight or struggle, but lay
-and tried to sleep; we had more room, and five or six died every
-day, because the stench had brought the fever spirit, and he sailed
-with us in the dark hold. Then, one night when the white moon was
-coming down the hatchway, the captain of the ship approached, and
-turned his lantern upon us as we lay—the king and me—where they had
-first chained us down. Then he began to ask where were the white men
-who were carried off after the ships broke, to be slaves. But he
-stopped and said to two sailors who were with him, “Take off their
-chains and bring them on the deck; it is better to speak there in
-the moonlight, than in this stench.” Our chains were taken off—we
-climbed the ladder—we passed the hatchway—and we stood upon the deck.
-The moon shone, as it shone above my hut—above the dark woods—above
-the dark river—above my country; the breeze was sweet to taste, as
-palm wine after bitter water. The white men slept upon the deck—the
-ship went steady before the night wind which came over the sea. It
-was good. The captain asked us again where the white men were slaves,
-and we told him a moon and two moons and three moons from where
-the dark river joined the sea. Then we said, that if he carried us
-back the white men would be found, and he would have them, and we
-would go ashore and we would make war and bring him many slaves and
-never cut the great ropes again. The captain spoke to the two white
-men who were with him, and very soon they took us down below, but
-they did not chain us again; many other slaves were also unchained,
-for all were very quiet; and when the white men struck them, or
-cut their flesh with their knives, they only groaned or cursed in
-their throats. I lay awake all that night, and the god that stood in
-my father’s hut, with the necklace of wild beasts’ teeth, gave me
-thoughts in my heart. I said to myself, we are slaves, but we may
-be masters; only one watches at the hatchway—at night the wind is
-small and the sea is smooth—the white men sleep in the moonlight—we
-may arise and kill them, and have the ship and its riches. I thought
-these things long to myself, and before the dawn I wakened the king
-and told him, and we conversed in whispers; the next day we told
-others, who were the stoutest men left, and who could speak the
-language of our nation. Thus we agreed, and we searched for billets
-of wood and spikes of iron, and bits of chains or fetters, to arm
-ourselves. The night came again, and the moon shone again through
-the hatchway. The wind was small and the sea smooth, and on deck the
-white men slept in the moonshine. Then every man adored his fetish,
-and called upon his god that he believed in, to help. I gave the
-sign, which was a shout of war, such as we raised when we rushed upon
-a sleeping village of our enemies to capture slaves. Then we all
-rushed at the hatchway—we tossed aside the grating of heavy wood and
-iron, as though it had been of the wattled hurdles which we planted
-round our fields. We were free. We shouted—we climbed—we leaped—we
-swarmed out in the moonshine. The white man who stood armed by the
-hatchway had only time to fire his carabine among us. Then a score of
-sticks, and iron chains, with handcuffs swung to them, split asunder
-his head. In a moment he was overboard and sunk in the sea. The
-white men were conquered. Some were asleep in hammocks, some on the
-deck. With great shouts and screams we rushed at them. We tore them
-from their beds. We dashed them on the deck. We slashed them with
-the knives we found. We hove them overboard. And the sharks which
-followed us from Africa, and were fat with the flesh of our fellows,
-swallowed the white men also. Therefore we were the masters of the
-ship, and it seemed a good slave; for when all the white men were
-dead and gone, it sailed on, and the small wind blew, and the sea was
-smooth, just as before. I looked then for the king, but he was dead.
-The one shot which the white man fired struck him—the ball drove the
-fetish of feathers, which was upon his breast, into his heart. He was
-dead, and the sharks had him also.
-
-‘Then all my countrymen called out, and said that I was king in his
-place, and that we must go back to Africa, to the deep forests and
-the dark rivers, to their huts, and their wives, and their slaves,
-to where the panther leaped and the crocodile swam, and the large
-bats hung in clusters from the trees. So they led me to the helm, and
-they said, “Steer us home.” There were clouds then over the moon,
-and the night was dark. I said, “Wait until the morning, and I will
-steer you home.” The morning came, the clouds passed away, the sun
-rose, and the wind came fast over the sea. They said again, “Steer
-us home.” But I looked around. I looked far and near. There was no
-land, only water. As in the desert there is only sand; so round us
-there was only water. It was the same on the right hand and on the
-left. There was the sky and the sea, and that was all. How could I
-steer them home? But if I said I could not steer them home, they
-would kill me; therefore I took the tiller in my hand. I stayed by it
-all day. Those who were the masters of the ship and of me, danced and
-sung about the deck. Sometimes they asked when we would be at home.
-I said, soon. They thought that I could conduct the ship to land.
-They would not let me leave the tiller. They brought food there. I
-slept there. I was afraid to move. I did not know the road home. Days
-came and turned into nights, and nights into days again. The sun
-rose out of the sea, sometimes on the right hand, sometimes on the
-left; sometimes before us, sometimes behind us. We were wandering
-upon the sea; a moon passed over us, and they said to me, “We are not
-yet at home; there is no land, only water. Take us home, or we will
-kill you, as you made us kill the white men.” Then I was sorry that
-we killed the white men. The night after, the wind grew loud, and
-the waves beat over the ship. I did not know what to do. The sails
-were left as the white men had spread them. The ship was tossed. She
-moaned, and groaned, and plunged deep into the waves. The sails made
-strange noises, the masts reeled and bent as trees in a hurricane.
-Then one by one they broke, and fell into the sea. The foam flew over
-us all night. A great load of masts, and ropes, and sails lay upon
-the decks, and from the decks they reached down into the sea. These
-we cut asunder with hatchets, for they were pulling the ship down
-into the depths; and when the morning came, the wind had gone away,
-and the ship lay quite still. She had no masts, and no sails; and as
-a man without legs cannot walk, so a ship without rigging cannot move
-upon the ocean.
-
-‘And still all on board cried, “Take us home.” Then I said to them,
-“We cannot go home, there are no sails; we must die here upon the
-sea.” Then for the first time I left the helm. I knew one thing that
-none else there knew—I knew where there was the strong drink.’
-
-‘Ay, that I’ll be bound you did!’ said Captain Garbo.
-
-I watched, and when none saw, when it was dark, I took a great vessel
-of strong drink, and also bread and meat, and went down with them
-into the deep places of the ship. I went near the keel. I sat in
-darkness, with beams around me, and ropes, and the rotten water that
-flowed slowly in from the sea—and which moved with regular tides,
-backwards and forwards, because of the ship rolling on the waves.
-That water had the smell of the thick mud in the creeks among the
-woods, after the rains, when the mists arise. It washed and gurgled
-over the slimy wood, and also the rusty chains and nails which lay
-at the bottom of the ship. There I ate and drank, and no one saw me.
-I heard them howling up above, for they knew not where I was; but
-they knew they were to die upon the sea. I stayed there drinking and
-sleeping. The strong drink was good, it made me drunk; it made me as
-if I was back again where the dark river joins the sea. When the jug
-was dry I went for more. It was night, and a great wind was blowing
-over the waves, and the ship rose up and sank down, like the first
-ship that went upon the rocks and was broken. The people were running
-on the deck—they were in fear; they said the sea was coming up over
-the ship. I did not care; I knew where the strong drink was. I got
-another jug, greater than the first, I also got some bread. As I
-passed in the dark, I heard a man say to a woman, “In two days there
-will be no food left.” I did not care; I went with the strong drink
-into the secret place of the ship. There I lay among the ropes and
-beams, and the stinking water which gurgled among them, as the waves
-beat hard on the outside. It was like a cave in the woods: it was
-like the den of the wild beasts. I burrowed in it like the crocodile
-in his abiding place, among the weeds and the thick herbage which
-grows by the creek. There I ate, there I drank—oh, much—much. The
-strong drink was like fire in me, and like light to me; it showed me
-my hut, where the river joins the sea; it showed me sun, and moon,
-and stars, and the sky over the woods and the sea; it showed me the
-deep waters where I paddled my canoe, and where I swam, and where I
-dived. I shouted and sang war-songs, and those above thought that
-the spirits of their enemies were exulting and were singing. When
-the jug was empty I went on deck. Many days had come and gone away
-into the past. The deck was full of people; they lay upon the planks,
-they groaned and cried, they were starving, and they yelled out for
-water, and for cassava, and millet, and maize, and rice. I went to
-the secret place where were the strong drinks. Lo! there were no
-more! Others found out the place, and took the drinks. I searched
-everywhere, but there was nothing—not a drop—not a crumb. There was
-no more food, no more drink—now we must die. I sat upon the deck, so
-did all; no man or woman spoke: sometimes one moaned—that was all.
-It was the same in the sunlight and the moonlight—when the air did
-not move and when the wind was strong. I looked upon the sky, it was
-always blue, there were no clouds from dawn-time to sun-setting:
-there was no rain to cool our lips; our tongues swelled and our
-throats were dry—as dry as the hole which the scorpion burrows in the
-hot sand. The people died one by one. When, they died they lay upon
-the deck where they fell; they rotted there amongst us, but we did
-not move to throw them to the sharks. At last there were ten men and
-women dead, to one man or woman living; then we spoke and we talked
-who would die next. One said he would, and another, that he would.
-When we die we fly back to Africa, and we said one to the other,
-“If you die first, you say we are coming: you say we are flying
-in the air behind you to Africa, to the dark woods and the dark
-river.” Then I sent messages to my father, who was killed in war,
-and to the king; I sent them by a young man who was very weak, and
-whose eyes were glazed. He lay close by me. I watched him well. His
-breath came longer and longer—then it ceased, as a branch you move
-ceases gradually to swing—and the jaw dropped down. I said, “Ha! my
-messenger has departed; I am glad.” That night there were but five
-left. I was the strongest of the five, but I could not rise from my
-seat amid the corpses. The breeze came fresh in the night; clouds
-came with it, and out of the clouds rain fell. We held up our mouths
-and we were refreshed. So, by means of the sweet rain, four out of
-the five lived until the grey light came out and showed fogs hanging
-on the water. The wind was small, and the sea smooth; and as the
-sun climbed out of the ocean, the fogs rose up and melted away, and
-we all gave a faint shout together, for not half an hour from us, a
-great ship, with many sails, glided like a bird upon the sea. As we
-looked, a canoe, with white men, came from the great ship, paddling
-fast towards us, and soon the white men leaped up among the corpses
-on the deck. They gave a great cry of horror when they saw all the
-planks covered with bodies, some sitting, some lying, some piled up
-upon each other in heaps—where fathers and sons, and brothers and
-sisters, and husbands and wives, had died together—and they were
-about to go back hastily into their canoe, but we all cried as with
-one voice for water. Then they turned and beheld us, and after some
-talking, they lifted us up and put us into the canoe, and rowed us to
-their ship. So was it that we became slaves again. Then they spread
-forth all sail, and our old ship, with its cargo of corpses, was left
-drifting about on the sea.
-
-‘We had good food and good water; we grew stout again, lusty, and
-strong. A moon passed away, and then we saw land, and a city of the
-white men. The city was called Porto Bello. We were sold there. My
-master took me up far into great mountains, where there was gold. The
-gold was down in the earth. The slaves dug holes in the sides of the
-steep hills. We crawled into these holes. We dug and hammered in dark
-places under ground, and white men with whips lashed us if we stopped
-to rest. But I longed and panted again for rivers and the sea. I grew
-weak, and my arms were soft and thin, and a spirit whispered to me,
-and I put earth and clay into my mouth, and swallowed them. Other
-slaves did the same, and slowly they died, and flew back to Africa.
-I wanted to die, and I ate much clay. I was very sick and weak, but
-they flogged me with whips, until I crawled into the holes, digging
-and hollowing under the earth for gold. At last—’
-
-‘At last,’ said Captain Garbo, ‘you have got so far with your story,
-that I may finish it for you. Being on a visit to see some of the
-gold mines of Darien, the overseer of one of them told me that he
-was losing almost all his negroes of the disease or superstition
-peculiar, I believe, to those Africans and called ‘dirt-eating.’
-He pointed out to Wooroo there, as one of them who was dying the
-fastest, and on my speaking to him, he told me what he has several
-times repeated, that he was a great swimmer and a diver. So such
-being the case, and being then, as now, much engaged in the pearl
-fishery, I bought the fellow for a trifle, took him down to the
-coast, and I am bound to say that a better hand under water never
-plunged over a boat. As soon as he was afloat, he recovered his
-health and spirits fast; and now, I suppose, there are not two men,
-white or black, in the fleet, that the fellow could not grasp in
-either of his hands, and smash their heads together.’
-
-As soon as his master had interrupted him, and bade him cease
-speaking, Wooroo lost all the look of intelligence and excitement
-which had gleamed in his eyes. He sat like a brainless statue of
-black wood. He had performed his task, and at length he held out both
-hands towards the spirit-flask, and only muttered—
-
-‘Give me the wages you said—make me much drunk.’
-
-Captain Garbo, without a word, filled a large measure with brandy,
-and handed it to the savage, who rose with it, and walked to a corner
-in the deep-waist of the ship. Passing there an hour after, I saw the
-brute lying insensibly drunk, with the empty measure still grasped in
-his hand.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXIV.
-
-MY ADVENTURES AMONG THE PEARL FISHERS, AND MY ESCAPE FROM THE FLEET.
-
-
-All this time we were beating gaily up to windward in company with
-our consort, both boats proceeding at much the same rate, and
-frequently hailing each other and sailing nearly alongside. On the
-third day from that of our departure, we saw upon our right, towering
-in great blue masses out of the sea, the high land of Santa Martha.
-Mariners say that it is higher than the Peak of Teneriffe, and that
-when the weather is very clear, there is a certain circuit of the
-Caribbean sea, not far from hence, where, from the tops of a lofty
-vessel, you may see at once the distant ridges of Hispaniola, the
-Blue Mountains of Jamaica, and the Peak of Santa Martha upon the
-main land. The next day, the coast line being far distant, and being
-cloven, as it were, by the great river De la Hacha, which here comes
-into the sea, we saw riding at anchor, in-shore from us, a squadron
-of small ships. We being still well at sea, the water beneath was of
-a deep blue; but where the Pearl Fleet, for such they were, lay, the
-hue of the sea was a light green. It was as glorious an afternoon
-as ever shone under the tropics, as bowling cheerily before the
-sea-breeze, we ran down for our sister ships, they lying at their
-anchors above the great bank of pearls. There were fourteen or
-fifteen barks similar to our own, and at some distance was a stately
-frigate, which protected them, lying-to.
-
-‘That is the convoy of the Pearl Fleet,’ said Garbo; ‘we must first
-speak her, and she will allot our station on the bank.’
-
-And, in fact, as he talked, the great maintop-sail of the Spanish
-ship was filled, and her bows, falling off from the wind and pointing
-to us, she moved slowly out to meet us. As she drew near, I could
-not help thinking that she was the same vessel which had chased the
-‘Will-o’-the-Wisp.’ At any rate, she had the same richly-carved bows,
-full of figures of angels and saints, and the same goodly fabric of
-rigging towering up against the blue sky. Presently, she hove-to
-again, our small sails being becalmed under her lee, and Captain
-Garbo, with two of his men, went aboard her in the small canoe which
-the bark carried. As for myself, I did not care to trust my neck on
-board a Spanish man-of-war. Indeed, I kept as much out of sight as
-I very well could, pretending to be busy about a thousand little
-matters on board the bark. I noted, however, that the Spaniard bore
-twelve great guns upon either side, besides double batteries upon
-forecastle and poop. Her high decks swarmed with men, who scrambled
-over into her chains and out at her port-holes, and chatted with
-the Spanish part of the bark’s crew, and mocked and gibed at Wooroo
-as he sat upon his hams on the deck, taking no more notice of what
-was said to him than the mast. Presently the captain returned with
-a card in his hand, whereon was inscribed the station of the bark
-upon the bank. Each boat had its own appointed place; and the frigate
-was there not only to protect the fleet against Buccaneers, but to
-enforce the rules which the Spanish government, to whom the fishery
-belongs, lays down to be observed by the barks which prosecute it.
-The pearl bank extends for a great many miles in length and one in
-breadth, there being a deep channel about three or four leagues
-broad between its inmost edge and the land. Our position was towards
-the eastern extremity of the bank, and so we beat up towards it,
-passing many of the anchored boats, who hailed us cheerily, and
-asked what news from Carthagena. As we sailed along, we saw the
-divers, all of them either Indian or negroes, standing often upon
-the edge of the boats, poising their bodies for a moment, and then
-plunging head-foremost down into the sea. Some of the fleet were
-more deeply laden than others, that depending upon the number of
-the oysters which chanced to lie scattered under each boat. As
-soon as the cargo is made up, the pearl fisherman weighs, hoists
-his lug sails, and runs in for the shore; but if the frigate fires
-two guns, one close after the other, he must lie-to, until a boat
-from the big ship comes and gives him leave to proceed. Although
-the rule, however, is, that each boat fishes and sails for itself,
-without attending to its neighbours, yet the convoy always tries as
-far as possible to arrange matters, so that the fleet may sail in a
-body to the shore, the frigate attending them to windward. If it be
-suspected that there are Buccaneers upon the coast, the ordinary rule
-is indeed altogether suspended, and no boat is permitted to weigh
-anchor until the commodore fire a gun, and hoist a blue flag at his
-foretop-gallant-mast head, when the whole squadron run gaily together
-for the Ranchiera, as the pearl village is called, upon the banks of
-the Rio de la Hacha. When we joined the fleet no danger was, however,
-suspected, and by the time that we had taken our station, and let
-the anchor splash from the bows, about half the barks, which were
-deepest in the water, had weighed; and hoisting their brown patched
-sails, scudded away before the last of the sea-breeze. As soon as it
-became dark each boat hoisted a lantern to its mast-head; the frigate
-showing two, one above the other, in the foretop-gallant rigging. The
-night was calm and still. Every now and then we would hear the faint
-sound of songs, coming over the water from distant barks; and, as
-hour after hour passed away, it was marked by the clang of the great
-ship’s bell. Meantime, on board our bark, we were busy preparing for
-to-morrow’s fishing. The waist was cleared out, and the decks fore
-and aft lumbered with the coils of rope and old canvas, flung aside
-to make room for the expected overflow of oysters. Then the baskets
-to be used in lifting them from the bottom of the sea, strong cages
-of thick wire, all rusty and bent, were prepared; the tackle was
-rigged, and lines were affixed to heavy pieces of lead, furnished
-with handles for the divers to grasp, so as to sink the quicker to
-the bottom. These preparations over, we cooked and ate our suppers
-and turned in, leaving but one hand on deck for an anchor watch, as
-sailors call it.
-
-‘Now,’ thought I, as, according to my custom, instead of crawling
-into the little cabins, which were not much better than the hold
-of the ship which had carried Wooroo from Guinea, I laid myself
-down on deck, well muffled up in old sails, to keep the heavy dews
-away—‘Now,’ thought I, ‘I have heard of kings and queens who slept on
-beds whereof the curtains were heavy with pearls, all glittering in
-their lustre above them, but here am I now, and here be a fleet of us
-poor sea-tossed mariners sleeping upon a bed with more pearls beneath
-and around us than there are in the treasuries and the thrones, and
-on the royal bed-curtains to boot, of London, or Paris, or Madrid.’
-I know not whether the kings and queens whereof I have spoken slept
-the better for the pearls above them; I know I slept well with pearls
-below me, being indeed favoured, perhaps by St. Gieronimo, with a
-vision in which I saw the ‘Will-o’-the Wisp’ suddenly appear in the
-midst of the Pearl Fleet and engage the Spanish frigate, Stout Jem
-himself fighting in single combat with the captain, and at length,
-by one stout thrust, pinning him to his own mainmast; when, just as
-I was about to spring forward to haul down the golden flag of Spain
-from the man-of-war’s topmast, a loud voice, coming from real flesh
-and blood lungs, smote my ear, and, starting up, I saw Captain Garbo
-and the rest scrambling through the hatchways in their shirts, while
-the anchor watch was shouting lustily that there was a strange vessel
-rowing with sweeps through the fleet, and that he had even heard the
-muttering of the voices on board of her. At this, I confess very
-willingly, my heart made a leap into my mouth. Was my dream a true
-vision—was Stout Jem, indeed, so near? We all held our peace and
-listened, but we heard nothing. It was now quite dark. The night had
-got cloudy, and there were neither stars nor moon. The air, too,
-was quite still, and the tap-tap of the water against the ridges of
-overlapping planks on the clinker-built side of the boat, as she
-rocked slowly on the swell, was the only sound we could distinguish.
-The lights of the other barks were gleaming on the dark ocean, and
-the two lanterns of the frigate swayed slowly from side to side, as
-though they were meteors playing among the stars.
-
-‘Tush, Pedro,’ said Captain Garbo,’ you fell asleep, man, and dreamed
-you saw a ghost. You deserve to be dipped alongside, just to waken
-you.’
-
-But at that moment we all started, for suddenly there came over the
-water a loud crash, as of two ships meeting, followed all at once
-by a crackling volley of musketry, which glanced bright through the
-darkness, gleaming in fiery streaks over the black oily-looking
-water, and then, mingling with the reports of the fire-arms, a great
-hearty cheer, such as Englishmen give when they leap upon the decks
-of an enemy. By the flashes we saw that one of the largest and
-heaviest laden of the pearl barks had been laid aboard by a very long
-low-built boat with three raking masts, like those of the vessels
-which the French call _chasse-marées_, and moved by a number of great
-sweeps, which extended from her sides like the long legs of some huge
-insect of the sea.
-
-‘The Pirates! the Buccaneers!’ screamed all our crew together, and
-they rushed to haul down our lantern, so that we might the better
-escape in the darkness. In the meantime, there was a great crashing
-and scuffling, with heavy plunges in the water, as though men had
-leaped or been thrown overboard, and then, in the course of a moment,
-there was again silence, and the light of the captured vessel, for
-such no doubt she was, disappeared. But on board of the rest of the
-fleet there sprang up, as you may conceive, the strangest uproar.
-Instead of hauling down their lights, as we had done, in less than
-a minute the sea was all a-fire with the infinity of lanterns and
-torches which they waved and flashed from rigging and deck, while
-such a clamour of shouts, blowing of trumpets and conch shells,
-beating of drums, and firing of muskets and pistols, I never heard.
-It appeared, indeed, as if the pearl fishers imagined that they
-would drive away their enemy by making a noise and hallooing; all
-this, however, was done, Captain Garbo said, to alarm the convoy;
-but, truly, they must have kept sleepy watch aboard of her, if they
-did not hear the tumult of the first attack. But in the meantime
-the great ship was aroused—a flash of red flame gleamed from out
-her sides, showing for a moment boats full of men surging in the
-water beneath, and her sails falling in great white patches from her
-yards, as she prepared to give chace to the enemy. But these broad
-sails were useless; not a reef point rattled against the canvas in
-the great stillness of the night; but we heard the dash of oars and
-distant shouts as the boats of the frigate pulled away from her among
-the fleet. Meantime, the din on board the different barks subsided,
-but we could see the crews as they ran to-and-fro upon the decks,
-still carrying torches and lanterns, while every minute or two the
-frigate fired a great gun, for what purpose I know not, only that it
-seems as if Spaniards, like Frenchmen, seldom think they are doing
-anything if they be not making a noise. But where, meanwhile, was the
-Buccaneer rowboat, or galley? I strained my eyes through the darkness
-in the direction in which I had seen her. Could she be an Englishman,
-I thought to myself, and, if so, would it be possible for me to board
-her? A light canoe floated alongside our bark, on which my eye fell
-as these ideas rose up in my mind. But, when I reflected a minute, I
-saw how mad would be any attempt to make my way in the darkness, and
-amid pursuing boats, to the vessel, even although she might be, what
-I had no certain means of knowing her—a friend.
-
-While I was pondering thus, Captain Garbo accosted me in a whisper—
-
-‘This is but a mad freak of your countrymen,’ he said, ‘for such I
-judge them to be. They could not expect to carry off the bark from
-the middle of a fleet, and without a breath of wind either.’
-
-Just as he spoke, a jagged flash of lightning, which dazzled me, tore
-right across the sky to the westward, and the loud crackling thunder
-had not ceased to explode above us, when a heavy puff of wind,
-bearing broad plashing rain-drops before it, struck our bark, and
-made her swing round to her anchor like a weathercock.
-
-‘A squall,’ I cried out, ‘and the privateer knew it was coming. It
-was that made them so bold.’
-
-Just then a whole row of lanterns was run up to the gaff of the great
-ship.
-
-‘See,’ said Garbo—‘a squall indeed. That is the signal for the recal
-of all her boats.’
-
-There was nothing which appeared to me very ominous in the look
-of the night. I only expected a pretty sharp outburst of wind and
-rain with thunder and lightning. And so, indeed, it proved, for in
-less than five minutes from the first flash, a strong gusty wind,
-driving before it a pelting rain, was whitening the sea around us,
-and hissing and whistling through the few ropes which formed our
-rigging, while the bark herself tore and plunged at her anchor, as
-if she would have wrenched it out from its hold amid the oysters. In
-a moment the flaming torches, shown from so many of the fleet, were
-blown out or quenched; but the great ship, burning a bright light in
-her main rigging, we saw her all lurid and blue in the glare, leaning
-heavily over to the blast, her slanting yards dotted with the seamen,
-who were taking in sail as fast as they had spread it forth. In a few
-minutes again all around was darkness, except where the glimmer of
-a lantern, tossing and tumbling as though a giant were flinging it
-from hand to hand, showed where one of the Pearl Fleet was jerking
-and straining at her anchor. The strength of the squall was not
-alarming, but it tore up the sea upon these shallow banks into quick
-cross-running and angry waves, and the rain was driven in our faces
-so sharply that the drops struck like hailstones.
-
-‘The only thing I fear,’ said Garbo to me, as we stood holding on by
-the foremast, ‘is for the frigate’s boats. There will be no great
-damage to anything else.’
-
-Just as he spoke, a man beside us shouted, ‘A boat! a boat!’ and
-looking forth ahead, we saw, clearly relieved against the whiteness
-of a breaking sea, one of the frigate’s barges coming tossing down
-upon us, while, almost at the same instant, a couple of dark sails
-shot, as it were, like dusky shadows into the faintly lighted circle
-around us, illuminated by the half-dozen lamps which, in imitation
-of the rest of the fleet, we had fixed to different parts of the
-rigging, and then in a moment, as the vessel which bore the canvas
-rose upon the crest of a sea, we all recognised the long, low galley
-which had laid the pearl boat aboard. She was flying along close
-hauled to the wind, the white foam beating in showers over her long
-dusky form, and sometimes over the two patches of sails which she
-carried. The boat of the frigate lay right athwart her track. There
-were two loud shouts from those in the boat and those in the sailing
-galley, then, in an instant, a straggling volley of musketry was shot
-by the former. The flashes illuminated the sea, showing the sharp and
-carved prow, ending in a serpent’s head, of the adventurous craft,
-and the grim faces of a cluster of men, who waved their hands and
-shook axes and cutlasses at the Spanish boat. Then there was a sudden
-order, in English, on board the galley, ‘Port! Hard a-port! and give
-them the stem.’ The bows an instant fell off from the wind, lifted on
-a sea, and crushed down upon the doomed boat, driving her under water
-like an eggshell, while, with a loud hearty hurrah, the Buccaneer
-swept past us, not three fathoms from our bowsprit, and, in a moment,
-disappeared in the night.
-
-‘A sail, close to astern,’ was at the moment sung out from the other
-extremity of our craft.
-
-‘Never mind the sail astern,’ shouted Garbo. ‘Here—ropes, oars,
-anything—there is a boat swamped ahead, and as he spoke, there
-appeared the wreck of the man of-war’s pinnace, with some of the men
-clinging to it, and others striking out amid the sea, and shouting
-lustily to us for help. A dozen of lines were flung to them at once,
-while the fat negro leaped overboard, calling to the struggling
-mariners to fear nothing. Wooroo never moved an inch during the
-whole affair, except to shake his woolly head when a heavier shower
-of spray than ordinary fell upon him. The Spaniards, who could most
-of them swim well, soon scrambled up our low sides, none the worse
-of their ducking. Not a man was missing, thanks to the aid of our
-little pearl diver, who had made directly for the wreck of the boat,
-and very dexterously lashed a couple of ropes round the only two of
-the crew who, either by being stunned in the collision, or from the
-bewilderment and suddenness of the whole affair, were clinging for
-life to the shattered boat, without having in the least the power of
-helping themselves. Such a scene of outcry, and swearing, and hubbub
-of all sorts, as the Spanish man-of-war’s men made when they got
-aboard, I never saw. They ran from end to end of the craft, shouting
-out, in the darkness, after the vessel which had run them down;
-roaring, by all the saints, that they would be revenged upon her,
-and that when the frigate caught her, they would not leave a French
-or English throat uncut on board. As for me, I deemed it politic to
-chime in with these declarations—to the great amusement of Captain
-Garbo, who was a very good fellow, and kept my secret like wax. When
-we had a little settled down—the squall having also fallen, and the
-sea getting smoother fast—the captain called for the man who had
-reported the sail astern, and asked him what like she was?
-
-‘Truly,’ said the mariner, ‘I can tell you not only what like she
-was, but what she really was—the vessel being no other than the bark
-which the Buccaneer laid aboard, and which no doubt she captured, for
-both ships were lying the same course—one passing ahead and the other
-astern of us.’
-
-‘Ay,’ said the officer of the man-of-war, shivering in his cold wet
-clothes, ‘it was the ship the scoundrels wanted, and there is no
-denying but they have carried her off very cleverly.’
-
-I was of the same opinion myself, and I could not but admire the
-judgment of the Buccaneers in rowing into the centre of the sleeping
-squadron, just before the outbreak of the squall, and then swooping
-off with their prey, in the midst of the confusion which it created.
-The weather soon cleared up. By midnight the stars were twinkling
-forth, and the frigate having worked up near us, we hailed that the
-crew of the pinnace were safe, and presently another boat coming on
-board, carried them to their own ship. With the earliest peep of
-the dawn I was at the mast-head of our bark. The fleet, with the
-exception of the one spirited away, were riding at their stations.
-The boats which had, yesterday evening, gone into the river with
-their cargoes, were again standing out for the bank. The frigate lay
-to windward—rising and falling on the froth-laced seas, with her
-main-topsail flat to the mast—but elsewhere the ocean was sailless.
-The Buccaneer and her prize, one of the largest and quickest vessels
-of the fleet, had disappeared.
-
-That morning, we began our proper business of collecting pearls, the
-method of which I will briefly describe. First, the fat negro went in
-the canoe to several points round about the vessel, diving into the
-water at each, and thus finding where the shell-fish lay thickest.
-This having been ascertained, he placed a small buoy upon the spot,
-and the bark was warped up to it. The iron-basket, which I have
-mentioned, was then let down to the bottom of the sea, the depth of
-which was hereabouts nearly five fathoms, or almost thirty feet. Then
-Wooroo and his comrade prepared for their day’s work, by stuffing
-their ears full of the down of the cotton-tree, without which, or
-some similar precaution, divers frequently become deaf. They anointed
-their limbs, too, with some sort of vegetable oil, and then taking
-the sinkers of lead, which I have spoken of, in their hands, they
-poised their bodies, standing upon the gunwale of the ship, and
-keeping time, as it were, to her roll, flinging back their arms and
-shoulders, and breathing deeply, so as to puff out their broad chests
-with air. Wooroo, while so standing, looked like a great black image
-of Strength. At length they leaped simultaneously, making but one
-splash, and as the water settled over them, we could see their black
-forms wavering and quivering, as it seemed, owing to the motion of
-the sea, and then presently clinging to the projections of rock, all
-tufted over with green sea-weed—in the rifts of which the oysters lay
-thick. As soon, however, as they began to tear up the latter from
-their beds, the water became so much mudded that we could not remark
-the process. In the meantime, we hauled up both sinkers, which the
-divers had let go on reaching the bottom, and placed them on the
-gunwale, all ready for the next plunge. The little man came up to the
-surface first—puffing and blowing. There was a sort of broad-stepped
-ladder, with three or four rounds, which was let down into the water,
-and upon one of which he sat to rest, basking himself in the hot sun.
-Wooroo did not appear at the surface, until I began to think that he
-would never come up at all—and said as much to Garbo.
-
-‘Drowned,’ said the good-tempered Spaniard; ‘that’s not the fate he
-was born to. Caramba! that fellow’s lungs will hold as much air as
-the biggest bellows that ever were puffed.’ And accordingly, after
-an unconscionable space of time, the negro rose, and clung to the
-ladder, his features appearing only a little swollen, and his vast
-chest heaving a little faster, as the consequences of his plunge. As
-soon as the basket was reported filled, it was drawn up and emptied
-into the deep waist, and then let down again. In the course of the
-day, another negro and an Indian, both expert divers, arrived from
-the shore to help us, there being generally four divers to each boat.
-Two cages were then let down together, and by nightfall, the bark had
-half her cargo on board.
-
-In consequence, however, of the bold attack of the pirate, or
-Buccaneer, the captain of the frigate determined that all the pearl
-fishermen should proceed together to the shore, and from thence back
-to the banks, sailing in a squadron; and as the greater number of
-the boats had their full cargoes on board, we all weighed anchor
-in company, stealing in slowly for the shore, upon a smooth sea
-glistening in the starlight. It was a fair spectacle that small
-squadron, with their white sails just sleeping in the light breeze,
-and with the great frigate, her huge lanterns shining over her poop
-like sea-beacons, and now and then belching forth a sheet of red
-spouting fire, as an admonition to any of the faster boats, which
-might appear to be inclined to take the lead of the rest, not to
-break the order of sailing. As we glided along, the crews of the
-barks often sang in chorus, the music being re-echoed and reflected
-as it were between the many sails spread out, until it appeared as
-if hundreds of choristers were joining in the burden. About midnight
-we crossed the bar of the Rio de la Hacha, the frigate remaining
-outside, and presently anchored near the shore, in a shallow bay,
-where the water was brackish. The land hereabouts is low and sandy,
-with abundance of thin-stemmed, narrow-leaved herbage, and few trees.
-The town is a mere assemblage of huts, kept up for the purpose of the
-pearl fishery, and inhabited by the Indians, being principally old
-men, women, and children, who open the oysters, under the constant
-superintendence of watchful Spanish overseers, who are there to
-keep a sharp eye upon the pearls. Notwithstanding all their care,
-however, they are very often cheated, and the most valuable pearls
-hidden and conveyed away. I had often opportunities while on board
-the fleet, and ashore in the ranchiera, or village, of seeing the
-process of opening the oysters. These were brought from on board the
-barks in flat-bottomed barges to the shore, whence they are carried
-in baskets, upon the heads of the Indians, to a sort of store-pit,
-or receptacle, into which they are flung. Close to this deposit are
-ranged a great many narrow tables, each of them consisting only of
-two rough planks set upon trestles, and shaded overhead by a roof
-of withered grass heaped upon hurdles. All along the tables, on
-one side, are ranged great lines of the Indian slaves opening the
-oysters, while upon the other side of the tables, stand the Spanish
-overseers, there being one overseer to every dozen or so of openers.
-When an Indian finds pearls, either of the large or the seed sort, he
-shouts out, and his superintendent immediately goes up to him, and
-takes charge of the precious substances, which he is bound in turn to
-give to the chief superintendent, who registers their size and value
-in an account book.
-
-The slaves are principally fed upon the meat of the oysters, which
-they prepare in a particular way, passing a string through a great
-number of oysters in the manner of threading beads or decorations,
-and then hanging the festoons thus made up to dry. They likewise
-live upon manatee and the flesh of wild cattle, the ranchiera being
-amply provided with hunters, whose business it is to supply such
-stores. The slaves work from sunrise to sunset, with about three
-hours intermission when the heat is the fiercest. They are a poor,
-dogged, sullen-looking sort of people, with long straight black hair
-and big cheek-bones. It is miserable to see them at their work,
-crouching under the whips of the overseers, not daring to whisper to
-each other nor to cease for a moment, but, bending down their heads
-over the board, and, when they find a pearl, calling out in a low
-whining tone to the overseer, who presently relieves them of it. I
-have often, having found occasion to be sometimes on shore during the
-day, sat upon a little sandy hillock, sheltered from the sun by a
-sort of umbrella made of plaited grass, many of which the Spaniards
-use, and gazed upon the scene. To seaward was the surf thundering
-white upon the bar, and almost on the horizon the pearl barks, like
-black specks, guarded by the big ship, as a little hamlet is by a
-castle. On one side the river came shining down, amid a waste of
-sand-banks and knolls, spreading out and slackening in its speed, as
-it began to feel the near influence of the sea. On its banks vast
-flocks of birds disported. The flamingos stood in red rows, drawn up
-like soldiers. Great cranes waded in the shallow water, like men on
-stilts. Ducks of many sorts flew by in long lines or in the shape
-of wedges, with a brave old drake to lead the fleet; while small
-water birds, which dive, floated upon the brownish river, sometimes
-tipping down to the bottom with a saucy jerk of their spruce little
-tails, and then coming up with a flutter and a quackle. By the
-margin, fixed to posts and stakes, lay a fleet of canoes, and the
-flat-bottomed boats which carried the oysters ashore; and here and
-there, lurking among the sand-hills with his gun, you might descry
-a Spanish sportsman, creeping along the shore to get a good shot at
-widgeon or teal. Upon the landward side there stretched out in the
-hot sun a wavy, sand-heaped shore, feathered here and there with a
-palm, bending in the sea-breeze. The village, which was two or three
-straggling streets of huts, built of wood and wattled branches, with
-some roofs scattered here and there of tarred canvas, which sailors
-call tarpaulin, supported upon stakes, boats’ masts, oars, and what
-not, lay, as it were, roasting brown in the fierce glare of the
-sun. A few black and stark-naked children played in the sand before
-the doors, and a Spaniard or two, with their white linen jackets,
-and broad straw hats, and red sashes tied round their middles, and
-everlasting pipes of tobacco in their hands, would be sitting in the
-shade, outside the long low hut which was the posada of the place,
-drinking draughts of wine from gourds or cups made of cocoa-shells
-mounted with silver, and playing cards or dice for shining dollars.
-At one end of the village was a rude sort of fort, built of unhewn
-stone, piled up and supported by a framework of stakes; it had no
-cannon, but was loopholed for musketry, and was set all round with
-sentry-boxes, in which Spanish soldiers dozed away the greater part
-of the day and night. Above the ramparts or palisades, which were not
-more than twelve feet high, and planted upon the roof of an inner
-house, rose a flag-staff bearing the broad red and yellow banner of
-Spain. In this fort, or stockade, lived the governor of the fishery,
-the chief superintendent, and the captain of the convoy, when he was
-ashore. All the pearls which were found were conveyed thither twice
-a-day, and overseers were continually passing and repassing from the
-great gate down to the opening tables, which stood in divers ranks
-all round the central pit into which the oysters were flung. From
-among those tables, half covered by their thin roofs of grass and
-hurdles, and lined by the dusky rows of working slaves, continually
-came the sharp crack of the whip, followed by a loud howl from some
-poor wretch detected whispering to his neighbour, or pausing a moment
-in his toil. Now and then an Indian would run hurriedly away from the
-tables towards the village, that man having found and delivered up a
-pearl above a certain weight, which entitled him to a holiday until
-the next morning; while, again, perhaps a poor brown devil would
-be walked off between a couple of the soldiers who attended at the
-tables, and taken to the fort, there to be flogged to an inch of his
-life for some offence given to the overseer of the board.
-
-Such, then, is a true picture of the pearl ranchiera, on the banks of
-the Bio de la Hacha. Meanwhile, days, and weeks, and at last months,
-slipped away, and I found myself no nearer my design of getting on
-board an English ship than when I left Carthagena. I went off every
-day in the pearl bark, and many an anxious look I cast to windward
-for a sail. One or two I saw, but at a great distance, and they did
-not seem inclined to come nearer. Indeed, the frigate being put upon
-its mettle by the recent attack, the governor of the fishery having,
-as I heard, rated the captain soundly for not keeping a better look
-out—the frigate, I say, was very vigilant, generally keeping to
-windward of the fleet; and when we remained all night at our anchors,
-burning blue lights and other fireworks constantly, and having all
-her heavy boats, with their crews armed to the teeth, rowing guard
-through and around the squadron, from sundown to sunrise, like
-most vigilant watchmen. Thus I did not think it probable that any
-privateer, excepting, indeed, a ship of great size, would dare to
-attack a fleet so guarded. So I considered myself almost as much a
-prisoner as when in the house of the Señora Moranté at Carthagena,
-and with as little prospect of speedy release. I panted for the
-sound of my countrymen’s voices again, and often and often did I
-start from my sleep, dreaming I heard Stout Jem’s hearty talk, or
-Nicky Hamstring’s cheery laugh. Thus I got downhearted and mopish
-enough, and often thought of purchasing from Captain Garbo, for I was
-not—thanks to my friends at Carthagena—penniless, the canoe belonging
-to the bark, and taking my chance in her to run down before the
-trades to the Samballas. Indeed, the unpleasantness of my situation
-increased day by day. Although I spoke Spanish reasonably well, and
-put great restraint upon my speech, so as never to drop a hint or
-a word which might betray my secret, I saw that I was suspected,
-and two or three times I thought it best to retreat as rapidly as I
-could from the lowering brows and fishing questions which the crews
-of the other barks, and sometimes the soldiers on shore, received
-me with. At length, one evening, when, much against my own will,
-I had accompanied Captain Garbo to the posada, so many hints were
-dropped about ‘spies,’ and ‘sailing under false colours,’ and so many
-interrogatories were put to me, touching the Spanish ships in which
-I had sailed, and the ports from which they set forth, that I made
-up my mind to take the very first opportunity of leaving my present
-comrades. Captain Garbo, who being a good deal heated by wine, must
-needs defend me with great warmth, and tell many lies in his zeal,
-each lie being, as is generally the case, quite inconsistent with
-the other, made the matter worse instead of better; and half-a-dozen
-times, just as the talk was turning upon something else, he would
-start up, and flourishing a knife in his pot-valiancy, would threaten
-that any man who said I was not a good comrade and a good fellow,
-should brook the stab. Now, among the company was one man to whom
-I took a special dislike, because he encouraged Garbo with all his
-might to defend me, at the same time dropping hints that I stood
-in need of the utmost eloquence which my protector could exert,
-and all the time slily laughing in his sleeve at both of us. This
-man was a squat, broad-shouldered little fellow, with a greasy,
-threadbare doublet, and a cunning-looking weasen face, lighted up
-by two bright winking eyes. He never seemed to me to sit a moment
-in the same position, but was always shifting about and fidgeting,
-and speaking here and there, to almost every one at once. This man,
-whom the rest called Señor Peralta, was, they told me, a merchant
-who came hither every year at the pearl season to purchase pearls
-of the chief officer of the fishery. He had a large half-decked
-piragua of his own, and was accounted by the Spaniards as a very
-adventurous and clever fellow; and being liberal with his money,
-and always ready to treat the commoner sort of men, as well as to
-sing merry songs, and crack merry jokes over his liquor, this Señor
-Peralta was quite a great personage in the ranchiera. The evening of
-which I am talking, I often observed his eyes fixed with an intent
-look upon me, and once or twice, as I judged, he made a sign with
-his hands, but what he meant I could not for the life of me divine.
-Next day, some accident—what it was I forget—prevented Captain Garbo
-taking his bark out to the bank, and so having nothing to do, I went
-wandering, low-hearted enough, among the sand-banks and knolls of
-grass down by the sea. At length, seeing a comfortable shade formed
-by some thick bushes, which kept off the sun, but let the sea-breeze
-whistle through, I sat me down, and began to think upon my project
-of obtaining a canoe, and chancing the run to the Samballas. While I
-was thus musing, I suddenly started to hear a voice near me singing
-softly; and I started again, and a thrill of pleasure went through my
-veins, when I recognised the words of the song for English. Almost
-afraid that I was dreaming, and fearing to awake, I listened while
-the musician, who appeared to lie concealed among the bushes behind
-me, sang with a clear, lusty voice these verses, which I remembered
-to have heard in the playhouses in London:—
-
- ‘Sir Drake, whom well the world’s end knew,
- Which thou did compass round,
- And whom both poles of heaven once saw,
- Which north and south do bound.
-
- ‘The starres alone would make thee knowne
- If men were silent here;
- The sun himselfe cannot forget
- His fellow-travellere!’
-
-The song being ended, I turned hastily round, exclaiming aloud—‘A
-countryman—a friend!’ And at the same time the bushes being rustled
-aside, out of them popped the grinning face of Señor Peralta! I
-staggered back with wonder, while the pearl-merchant called out, in
-good English—
-
-‘Truly a young bird, and to be caught with the veriest chaff! Why,
-man, thou art a pretty dissembler indeed, when thou canst not hear
-the butt-end of an old ballad of our country, without leaping and
-bellowing like a moon-calf. I can tell thee, that had I been as
-unwary, I should have danced from the end of a halter aboard yonder
-frigate, long ago!’
-
-By this time, I was recovered from my surprise, and running up to
-Peralta, assisted him to scramble out of the bushes, beseeching him
-at the same time to explain to me this mystery, and tell me what he
-was. Before answering one word, however, he led me quite away from
-the cover of the bushes, down to the seaside. ’Where I was hidden,’
-he said, ‘another can hide—the open beach keeps safer counsel.’ Then
-sitting down upon a great stone—the surf almost coming up to our feet—
-
-‘I suspected you for an Englishman,’ quoth he, ‘the first day I saw
-you. And last night I took the liberty of making myself quite sure.
-I don’t think you liked the process. But I am an old hand in these
-matters, and he must understand his business well, who makes me
-believe falsely that what he seems he is. Now, just tell me candidly
-how you came here, and perhaps I may help you to what I am pretty
-sure you want, and that is a means of getting quit of our friends in
-the ranchiera yonder.’
-
-I acknowledged that he had divined my thoughts, as well as he had
-penetrated my disguise; and so, in a few words, imparted to him some
-outline of my story. He heard me out very attentively; and then says
-he—
-
-‘If I were you, I would go to Jamaica, and claim my property.’
-
-‘What property?’ I said, in amazement.
-
-‘Why,’ quoth he, ‘have you not heard of the fate of the Carthagena
-galleon? She was taken two days’ sail from the coast by a privateer
-schooner, which I understand to be no other than yours—the
-Will-o’-the-Wisp. It was the richest prize that hath been captured
-in these seas for many a year. The privateer sailed with her into
-Port Royal, in Jamaica; and as you say that the captain is a
-staunch-hearted fellow; and as Mr. Pratt, whom I know to be a very
-honest gentleman, is concerned in the matter, I do not doubt but that
-your share of the adventure, to which you are fully entitled, and
-which must be very considerable, will be duly accounted for to you.’
-
-This was great news indeed. I only lamented that I had not been on
-board in the action, but the pearl merchant, who, it seems, had got
-his information from those who had spoken with the mariners of the
-galleon, after they landed on the main coast, being sent back in
-their boats by the privateers—my pearl merchant, I say, told me that
-the Spaniards having been boarded in the night, and when they were in
-no posture of defence, had made next to no resistance, and that the
-galleon had been very easily secured. Of course, this intelligence
-made me doubly anxious to make my way to Jamaica, or to any port
-where I could regain my comrades, and I eagerly asked my new friend
-whether he could not put me in the way of getting thither.
-
-‘Why,’ says he, ‘if I could not, I shouldn’t have made myself known
-to you at all, but the truth is, that I need your services as a
-seaman. I have got a very large decked piragua—you may see her
-masts as she lies there in the river—in which I have, as I may say,
-sailed the whole Caribbean Sea. This trip, however, I have been
-unfortunate, having lost a very good fellow—a negro—my prime seaman,
-who died about a month ago of the small-pox. I have but two men
-slaves of my own left with me, and I was thinking where I could get a
-good fourth hand, who knew somewhat about the sea, when fortune sends
-you to my aid.’
-
-I protested my willingness to serve him, and we had a long discourse
-together. He told me that he was an Englishman by birth, but that his
-father was a Spaniard and his mother a Frenchwoman. Thus, he said, he
-had learned from his earliest youth, a smattering of all the three
-languages, and having lived long in London, Paris and Cadiz, in after
-years, pursuing his craft of a jeweller and goldsmith, he had very
-little difficulty, when need was, in passing himself off for a native
-either of England, France, or Spain. For some years back he had been,
-he told me, sailing about the West Indies, trafficking in precious
-stones and gold. He had no fixed place of abode.
-
-‘Sometimes,’ quoth he, ‘I kneel very piously at mass, and make the
-sign of the cross, in the great cathedral at Havannah—and then I am
-as grave a Spaniard as the Cid. Again, I shall sing and dance at a
-merry-making in Tortuga—and, there, credit me, I bear a heart as
-light and as French as ever did the good king of Yvetot. Anon, I
-shall drink and shout with our good friends, Archemboe, Davis, and
-the rest at Port Royal, and not a bully of them all but shall swear I
-am as bluff a Briton as jolly King Hal!’
-
-I then intimated my hopes, that his trade so venturously conducted
-was a profitable one.
-
-‘As for that,’ quoth he, ‘what with my poor efforts in the New
-World, and the exertions of my good correspondents at divers courts
-in Europe, I thank the stars that there is more than one imperial
-regalia the wearer of which oweth me more, perchance, than he will
-ever pay. But I am not exacting. When a sensible man deals with
-kings, if he does not get money, he can always have money’s worth.’
-
-This speech the pearl merchant, or jeweller, delivered with
-abundance of nods and winks and shrugs, as though there were many
-meanings in it, out of which I was welcome to take my own. Then he
-whispered—
-
-‘If you would have gold cheap, know the miners. If you would have
-pearls cheap, make much of the divers. Deal at the fountain—go to the
-well-head—the well-head, my son!’
-
-At this he laughed very complacently, and I thought it best to laugh
-too, although for my life I could not fathom the meaning of the
-riddling words which the man spoke, and which he accompanied with so
-many expressive shrugs of the shoulders and grotesque leers, that I
-was as much puzzled by what I saw, as by what I heard. All at once,
-however, he broke off, and said, plainly enough—
-
-‘Now we know each other sufficiently for the present. My time for
-remaining in this oystery part of the world will be over in two or
-three days, and I presume that you will have no objections to ship in
-my piragua, and take the chances of the sea to Port Royal?’
-
-Of course I engaged to be ready at a moment’s warning, and we were
-about to part, when he said suddenly—
-
-‘I have little to do this evening, and I suppose you have less. Come
-and sup with me. Any one will show you the hut of Peralta, the poor
-pearl merchant. Come at ten.’ These words he spoke with one of his
-habitual leers and shrugs. I promised very readily, and then Señor
-Peralta walked away demurely, counting his beads.
-
-I lost no time in communicating to Captain Garbo that I had now
-an opportunity of shortly getting a passage to one of the English
-islands. He was very desirous to know how I had managed it; but upon
-that head I would give him no satisfaction.
-
-‘Well,’ quoth he at last, ‘so be it, Señor Lindsay; but I say, the
-first time you and your comrades take a Spanish bark, be lenient to
-my countrymen; be as merciful as you can to their goods and chattels
-for the sake of old Manuel Garbo, the pearl fisher.’
-
-At ten o’clock exactly I took my way over the sandy beach to
-Peralta’s hut, which stood a little apart from the other buildings,
-towards the landward extremity of the ranchiera. As I plodded along,
-sometimes tripping over mounds of oysters; sometimes stopping to look
-to seaward, where all the lights of the pearl squadron glimmered as
-the fleet sailed towards the shore, I suddenly heard a loud outcry,
-in which I could distinguish the yells of an Indian, and the gruff
-voices of Spaniards high in oath, and who, I conjectured, from the
-clash of arms, were soldiers. In a minute or two I saw faintly a
-dusky group of people, whites and Indians, some of them carrying
-lanterns, which gleamed on drawn swords and bayonets. The men bearing
-them disappeared through the principal gate of the fort, and then
-the Indians, who were left outside, raised the most pitiable cries
-and howls, until they were threatened by the sentries, and told they
-would be fired upon if they did not disperse. As I was somewhat late,
-I did not stop to inquire into the cause of the tumult, but I judged
-that it was probably occasioned by the arrest of an Indian who had
-committed some crime; perhaps, as was very common, stolen or secreted
-a valuable pearl. However, I did not think much of the matter, and
-soon arrived at Peralta’s hut. It was a large house as compared with
-most of its neighbours, fenced all around with walls formed of double
-lines of strong tough stakes, the space between them being filled
-up with stones gathered apparently from the sea beach. On knocking,
-I was admitted by Peralta himself, who led the way into a small
-room, with walls roughly built of wood and stone, through which the
-starlight was shining at many cracks and crevices, and mingling with
-the smoky glimmer of a great brass lamp. The place contained but the
-most ordinary sort of furniture—a hammock hung in a corner, an oiled
-bag for holding clothes, a table, and two or three small chairs, or
-rather large stools. The table, however, was laid out for supper, and
-showed a capital repast of fish, flesh, and fowl, while a couple of
-flasks, with slim necks, and all cob-webbed and begrimed, as though
-they had long lain deep in a well-stocked cellar, made a curious
-contrast to the cracked crockery and wooden platters, and hacked and
-broken knives and forks which lay beside them.
-
-‘You see,’ quoth Peralta, ‘that, though I may have dealings with
-kings, I don’t by any means live in a palace. There are idle vanities
-and substantial vanities, my friend. Diamonds and pearls, laces and
-gildings, brocades and velvets, are of the former class; but good
-meats to eat, and good wines to drink, are of the latter. Now you see
-I am an admirer of the substantial vanities. I love to feed upon the
-daintiest morsel, though it be picked up with a broken one-pronged
-fork, and I love to drink the choicest vintage of Rhine or Rhone,
-without at all caring whether I put my lips to a golden cup which
-Benvenuto hath wrought, or to a calabash which Quako hath scooped
-before supper.’
-
-So saying, the pearl merchant started the cork from one of the
-flasks, and I tasted certainly the most delicious draught which ever
-tingled on my palate.
-
-‘Ha!’ quoth my entertainer, as I held out the empty cup to be
-refilled, ‘you find that better than even the most skilful
-compound of rye brandy and bilge water. _C’est bien alors_—you have
-a palate, which I grieve to say many gentlemen of your kind and
-profession possess not, preferring the hot strong drinks of Jamaica,
-and Tortugas taverns, even, to such adorable nectar as this. Why,
-man, hold out thy glass again, the grand Louis himself cannot fish
-up a choicer flask from the most sacred crypt beneath the marble
-pavements of Versailles.’
-
-Talking in this way—relating to me strange anecdotes touching great
-generals and statesmen, and even kings, with whom my host, to believe
-his words, had held familiar converse, and the moral of all these
-stories being, that the generals and statesmen and kings in question
-were as stupid, and as easily to be gulled and laughed at, as mere
-ordinary mortals—the supper and one of the wine flasks were soon
-despatched. Then, placing the fragments in a corner, Peralta produced
-a sort of purse or bag of filigree workmanship, in bright silver,
-and which seemed to be the only thing of price in his dwelling—always
-excepting the meats and wines—and taking from it some tobacco of most
-delicate savour, we began to smoke and discuss the second bottle,
-which was of a different kind from the first, the wine being of
-a deep rich red tinge, and coming, as he told me, from Dijon, in
-Burgundy.
-
-While we sat thus, my entertainer took almost all the conversation
-to himself. He spoke of things new and strange to me: of the crown
-jewels of mighty potentates pledged to rich Hebrews dwelling in the
-filthy back lanes of the cities of Europe—in the Jewry of London, the
-Judenstrasse of Frankfort, and the Ghetto of Rome.
-
-‘And your brave Christian goes past, stopping his nose for the
-savours of fish fried in oil, and elbowing and jostling the
-hook-nosed, shabby old men who make way, with many a ‘Give you good
-e’en, my lord;’ and ‘Faugh!’ says he, ‘these stinking unbelievers;
-why be they not packed bodily off to their holy city again’—and so
-passes he by, to kneel, and cringe, and kiss the king’s hand; while
-all the time—ha! ha! ha!—that very king is thinking and pondering in
-his small mind how best he can squeeze the next subsidy out of his
-faithful cities and towns, and so release the brightest jewel in the
-regalia, now held in pawn by old Isaac, or old Jacob, or old Abraham,
-the very dirtiest, raggedest, yellowest-skinned and hookedest-nosed
-of the whole brotherhood—ha! ha! ha!’
-
-The pearl merchant said this with so much gusto, and laughed with so
-much glee, that I began to think he must be one of the fraternity
-himself. He seemed to divine my thoughts, for, as if I had spoken
-them, he, as it were, replied—
-
-‘No, no, no! Señor Buccaneer, although I have much traffic with the
-seed of Abraham, I am none of their kindred; were I such, I would be
-wiser than to come here to live in a sty on this scorching coast,
-driving hard bargains for sick oysters.’
-
-My entertainer then went on with his stories of European courts,
-and I was listening with open mouth, as he told, with many a quip
-and many a sneer, how, under the guidance of one Chiffinch, he had
-one night passed up the back stairs at Whitehall to hold a secret
-interview with Louise de Querailles, since Duchess of Portsmouth,
-touching certain jewels which it was convenient to raise money upon
-until there should come a remittance from the court of Versailles,
-through Monseigneur Barillon, the ambassador of Louis; when all at
-once there came a loud rap, accompanied by a shrill whistle, at
-the door. Peralta started quickly up, but without appearing at all
-discomposed, and opening the door with speed, a handsome fellow, a
-mulatto, dressed like a sailor, bounded in, exclaiming at the same
-moment, in a loud whisper:
-
-‘Juan and Blanco are both detected!’
-
-Then seeing me, he stopped as suddenly as though he had been shot.
-But Peralta speedily reassured him.
-
-‘Go on, man; go on. He who standeth there is my friend; he is one of
-us. Go on. Have they confessed?’
-
-‘All,’ replied the mulatto. ‘They first told the truth, and then a
-great deal more than the truth, in hopes the better to save their
-necks. I squeezed in with them into the fort, and heard it all. The
-soldiers are coming. I heard the order given.’
-
-Peralta stood still for a moment, and then said hurriedly, ‘Doth it
-blow?’
-
-The mulatto replied, that there was a light air only, from the
-eastward.
-
-‘With the tide two hours on the ebb. That will do well. Disco is on
-board the piragua?’
-
-The mulatto nodded eagerly. Peralta turned to me—‘I suppose,’ quoth
-he, ‘you have no objection to make a start of it this very hour?’
-
-‘None, none,’ I replied; wondering with my whole soul at the meaning
-of this strange scene.
-
-‘Follow me, then, and do as I do,’ replied Peralta. He swallowed his
-last cup of wine, and smiled when he saw me copying his example to
-the letter. Then, blowing the lamp out, we all three sallied forth
-into the night, walking quickly but cautiously amongst the scattered
-huts. I knew that it was no time for questions, so put none, though
-I was almost bursting with curiosity. In a minute or two we heard
-the measured tramp of soldiers advancing, and presently the clash
-of their arms and the gleam of their lamps burst forth together as
-they marched round the corner of a small street, followed by a great
-many Indians. There was a hollow place close by where we stood,
-with ridges of oyster shells on either side. Into this Peralta sank
-suddenly, flinging himself flat upon the ground, while the mulatto
-and I followed his example. In a minute the soldiers marched by, with
-their attendant rout of Indians gabbling and chattering very eagerly.
-
-‘Now,’ quoth Peralta, ‘for the beach, and make as little noise as you
-can in running.’
-
-With these words off he set, going over the ground much faster than
-to look at him I should have thought possible. However, the mulatto
-and I kept close behind him, meeting nobody, although we heard a
-distant tumult of voices in the ranchiera, and the tramp of people
-running hither and thither. There were half a dozen skiffs and
-canoes moored to as many stakes rising from a small slippery jetty,
-and sheering backwards and forwards as the current of the ebbing
-tide ran swiftly beneath them. Into the outermost of these skiffs
-Peralta leaped as nimbly and steadily as if he had been a waterman
-at Whitehall Stairs, we following closely upon his heels; but just
-as we had, as by instinct, sat down to the oars, Peralta cried out
-to us to hold, and then stepping back upon the jetty, very coolly
-cast loose the painters of the whole of the remainder of the boats
-from their fastenings, and gathering the ends of the ropes together,
-as a coachman does his reins, he shuffled back again into the stern
-sheets, casting off our moorings as he passed by, and then, with a
-low chuckle to himself, we pushed off and rowed into the stream, the
-squadron of boats following in our wake.
-
-‘Pull away, my good fellows,’ Peralta then said, taking an oar out of
-one of the skiffs behind us, ‘I will steer you.’ Our course was down
-the stream, and we swept along very rapidly, while, looking back, we
-could see, by the lights which came dancing all down the beach from
-the houses, that the Spaniards were in hard pursuit. In a minute more
-a cluster of these lanterns shone upon the jetty, and instantly their
-bearers raised a clamour and shouting that all the boats were gone.
-Señor Peralta only laughed to himself.
-
-‘Well,’ he muttered in a moment or two, ‘it is a shabby way to leave
-old friends, but needs must when the devil or an angry Spaniard
-drives.’
-
-All this time we were shooting swiftly down the river, the broad
-surface of which, gleaming in the starlight, now began to heave and
-undulate, as the swells of the sea, rolling over the bar, affected
-it. As we pulled, Peralta, taking advantage of a great shout faintly
-heard from the shore, hailed, ‘Disco! Disco, ahoy!’
-
-A long shrill whistle was the reply, and, looking round, we saw the
-low dusky form of the piragua, with her two high raking masts, and,
-pausing on our oars, we heard the rush of the tide against her sharp
-bows.
-
-‘Disco is all awake,’ said Peralta, and in a moment more we were
-alongside and tumbling into the piragua, which, notwithstanding her
-very considerable size, was so light as to rock violently as, one by
-one, we leaped over her gunwale.
-
-Disco himself, a Mosquito Indian, as I judged him, appeared to have
-been just aroused by the clamour on shore, and he asked eagerly what
-the matter was.
-
-‘The matter,’ said Peralta, ‘is, that we must get to sea as soon as
-we can. Thank God the breeze comes fresher—that puff quite ruffled
-the water. Jenipa,’ this was to the mulatto, ‘jump forward and cut
-the cable—no time for weighing. Disco, get a sweep or an oar out on
-the larboard bows to cant her head round. Lindsay, bear a hand, my
-man, and get the canvas upon her, or some of our friends ashore will
-be swimming down upon us with their knives in their teeth.’
-
-The coolness of Peralta was capital to see. Just as Jenipa’s knife
-went with a cheep through the strands of the hemp, Disco’s oar dashed
-into the water, and the stream catching the larboard bows of the
-piragua, she swung round with her head towards the shore we had just
-left, while Peralta, who worked as though he had been afloat all his
-life, flung loose the foresail from the long supple bamboo yard, and
-then both of us clapping on to the haulyards with all our might, the
-light canvas, all dripping with the night dew, rose steadily to the
-top of the mast, and then catching the faint puff of the sea breeze,
-which has but little power when it blows in the night-time, the sail
-swelled gracefully out, while Peralta, with the sheet in his hand,
-leaped aft, catching hold of the tiller, and calling to us all to
-get the mainsail upon the piragua. We were, as the reader may guess,
-in no humour for trifling, and accordingly the big lugsail was very
-soon hoisted by rapid jerks, up the mast, and when, after having made
-fast the haulyards, and trimmed the sheet aft, I paused a moment
-and looked round, I was quite bewildered. The breeze was hardly
-sufficient to keep the wide sails sleeping. I heard no loud rushing
-gurgle, such as a vessel makes travelling fast through the water; yet
-the lights upon shore were flying by us as though we were borne on
-horseback towards the sea—the great white flakes and stripes of froth
-which had floated into the river from the bar, glanced past, showing
-like light veins and streaks in dark marble—while the skiffs which
-Peralta had cut loose were almost out of sight astern.
-
-I uttered an exclamation of wonder, at which Peralta laughed
-pleasantly.
-
-‘Your Will-o’-the-Wisp may be fast, Señor Buccaneer,’ he said, ‘but
-no craft that ever came off the stocks of European ship-builders will
-sail with the boats which the Indians—savages we call them—can scoop
-with rude tools out of a single glorious tree. Do we not move like an
-apparition—a sea spirit? Let the Spaniards chase us in their clumsy
-wooden boxes, the piragua will earn her right to her name though all
-the navy of Old and New Spain were flashing in her wake. I call her
-the “Ghost;” does not she glide like one fleeting to the sepulchre at
-the first glimpse of the light of the morning?’
-
-I looked at Peralta, beginning to suspect that the sudden flurry,
-coming after the humming wine, caused him to vapour a little—but, if
-it were so, he very soon came to himself.
-
-‘Hark!’ said Disco, ‘the surf on the bar.’
-
-‘And see,’ added Jenipa, ‘the lights of the Pearl Fleet close to in
-the offing.’
-
-‘Forward, and look out, both of you,’ cried Peralta, sharply. ‘Keep
-your eyes open on either bow.’
-
-Meantime I crouched down by the steersman on the weather-quarter.
-The lofty lights of the frigate were much further to sea than
-the squadron she guarded. Indeed, the great ship cared not for
-approaching too closely the many banks and spits of sand, which run
-out from the bar, and over which most of the smaller barks could
-float very well. The leading ships, however, appeared to be as close
-to the bar on one side as we were on the other.
-
-‘Now,’ said Peralta, ‘grant that the stupidity of those fellows on
-shore will keep them from making any signal to their comrades out at
-sea.’ But the words were hardly out of his mouth, when the water and
-the sky were lit up with a mighty flash, and the loud report of a
-great gun—a small battery of which was planted before the fort—came
-rolling down the river; and immediately afterwards a straggling
-volley of small arms rattled all along the bank, as though the
-soldiers were dispersed and running down towards the sea. By this
-time, the white water on the bar was close ahead.
-
-‘Starboard—starboard. Keep her a little away, master, the channel is
-on the lee-bow,’ cried Disco. The course of the piragua was altered
-accordingly, and glancing ahead, I saw the streak of dark water,
-leading to the open sea; at the same time that the fleet of pearl
-fishers answered the alarm from ashore, by kindling torches, waving
-lanterns, and shouting and blowing horns, just as they had done the
-night that the privateer had swooped down in the centre of them, and
-carried off one of the very best in his clutch. At this moment, we
-having drawn clear of the sand hills on shore, the breeze freshened,
-sweeping down the coast, heavy with the dew of the night air. The
-light sails swelled stiffly out, the sheets tautened, the thin supple
-masts swayed and creaked, and the few ropes which stayed them upon
-the weather-side stretched out as rigid as iron-bars. And yet the
-piragua flew by every swell which rolled in from the offing—not
-plunging into the great green seas, and flashing the foam sparklingly
-up into the air, but moving rather like a bird, which, with spreading
-and far-stretched pinion, just glances over the sea, rather flying
-than swimming—borne more by the winds than the waves. Truly, I had
-never sailed in so wonderfully-fashioned a craft—so thin and slight
-was her construction, that she appeared, as it were, to yield, and
-bend, and quiver in the seas—but ever on, gaily and lightsomely,
-she went, sliding, as it were, without noise and without shock,
-leaping with a quick, buoyant, bounding motion, right over and over
-the swells, which now, as the water shoaled upon the bar, began to
-roll by us, white with milky foam. Verily, Peralta did well when he
-likened his piragua to a noiseless gliding ghost.
-
-While I was still wrapped in amazement at the performances of the
-canoe, she was flying across the bar in the very midst of the fleet
-of pearl fishers. The whole thing passed over me like a vision—a
-dream of flashing foaming water, plunging and dripping ships, with
-their canvas flapping, and their booms, and yards, and ropes,
-creaking and moaning, and rattling together—of fierce, eager faces,
-and hurrying, dusky forms, running on the decks, leaping into the
-riggings, flashing their torches and lanterns; shouting, yelling, and
-hailing the piragua and Peralta to lie to, and put about—and some of
-them flourishing glimmering knives and firing pistols in the air.
-
-All this, I say, appeared to pass by me like a vision, or a dream—and
-it only lasted for a few brief moments—for the piragua, which was
-steered in a fashion which made me look upon Peralta as a sailor
-rather than a merchant, flew through the panic-struck squadron, who
-could no more catch her, than they could the shadow of her tall
-sails upon the water. Once, and once only, a heavy hook or grapnel,
-attached to a stout line, was flung by a lusty arm, and lighted in
-the piragua’s fore-rigging, but even before the rope had tightened,
-Disco leaped to the spot, his knife flashed, the severed hemp fell
-back into the sea, and the useless iron tumbled down into the bottom
-of the canoe. The next moment we were fairly at sea, with the whole
-of the squadron, save one or two loiterers, behind us. Just then the
-frigate, who was a couple of miles or so in the offing, fired a heavy
-cannon, and showed a number of lights, by which we saw swarms of men,
-rushing from the high carved bulwarks into the rigging, as if they
-designed to make sail in all haste.
-
-‘Ho! ho! ho!’ laughed Peralta. ‘Here comes the elephant chasing the
-weasel, and the elephant thinks that the best way to begin the race
-is to roar a little.’
-
-And, indeed, any attempt of the big ship to follow us would have been
-just about as hopeless a chase as that to which Peralta had likened
-it. So, after firing a few more guns, whether with shot in them or
-not we neither knew nor cared, she stood cautiously in for the bar of
-the river, sending her boats before her, as we conjectured, to learn
-the cause of all the uproar. Meantime we had struck a light, keeping
-the lantern, however, well masked, and then setting the head of the
-boat about nor-nor-west, that being as near the wind as we could lie,
-and at the same time make good way through the water, we trimmed the
-sails neatly, and cried, ‘Northward Ho! for Jamaica.’
-
-For about an hour, during which time little was spoken, Peralta
-held the helm. He then called us all round him, and apportioned the
-watches in the ordinary seaman fashion—I being placed with Disco,
-and he taking his turn of duty with Jenipa. This settled, we tossed
-up whose watch should begin first, and it falling to the turn of
-Disco and myself, Peralta gave me the helm, instructing me, as I was
-not well acquainted with the management of piraguas, to call him if
-the wind freshened so much as to seem to demand the taking in of a
-reef. Then creeping beneath the half-deck, which extended from the
-bows to abaft the foremast, he coiled himself up along with Jenipa,
-and the pair went very quietly to sleep. During our watch, which
-was tranquil, I tried to obtain some information from the Indian
-touching the habits and pursuits of his master, and also relating to
-the causes of our very sudden departure. But the fellow, although he
-would talk glibly enough upon the weather, or the piragua, or the
-manner of our escape, was as close as wax as regarded everything
-else. Indeed, he reminded me very truly that I ought to know more
-about the reason of our departure than he, having come from the
-shore, while he had been sleeping on board the piragua. At that I
-told him what I had heard from Jenipa, about Juan and Blanco having
-been detected and taken to the fort, where they had confessed not
-only the truth, but, as I had heard, more than the truth. The
-Mosquito man merely shrugged his shoulders, and said he could make
-nothing of it, although I saw very well, by the intelligent look
-of the fellow’s face, as the binnacle lamp shone upon his bronzed
-features, that he understood much more of the matter than he chose to
-confess. Finding I could make nothing of the Indian, I set myself to
-consider the whole affair, and putting Peralta’s hints about the way
-to get pearls cheap, in connexion with what I had actually witnessed
-and heard, I was not long in arriving at the conclusion, that, in all
-probability, for every pearl which the merchant bought of the captain
-of the fishery, he obtained another, and at a very considerably
-cheaper rate, by dealing quietly with the openers themselves, to
-which class I concluded that Juan and Blanco must belong. This
-solution of the riddle seemed the more probable, when I remembered
-much that I had heard touching the great number of pearls supposed
-to be secreted by the Indians, in spite of the utmost vigilance of
-the Spaniards. Jamaica sloops had, I knew, ere now gone to hover
-near the Rio de la Hacha, having their agents and correspondents, in
-various disguises, lurking upon the coast, and of course keeping up
-communication with the Indian divers and openers; but the adroitness
-and courage shown by Peralta in living as a Spaniard openly amongst
-Spaniards, and supporting the character of a regular pearl merchant,
-communicating with the captain of the fishery, while in reality he
-was driving the best part of his trade by underhand dealing with
-the Indians, conducted, no doubt, at great and constant risk of
-detection and death; all this inspired me with no small respect
-for the abilities and the nerve of the owner of the piragua. Then
-I thought with what cool generalship he had conducted the retreat,
-not losing a moment by delay, yet taking his measures with as great
-composure and deliberation as if he were departing upon a pleasure
-cruise. Afterwards, I began to wonder that I had not observed him,
-when leaving the hut, take with him the amount of pearls which I
-felt sure that he must have amassed; but a few minutes’ reflection
-convinced me, from the perfect unconcern with which he had walked out
-of the hut, not caring to pick up any one article of those strewn
-about, that all the valuables which he possessed on shore, he carried
-constantly concealed about his person. Indeed, in the matter of such
-costly toys as pearls, or precious stones, a man’s own garments
-formed by far the safest depository to be found in the ranchiera.
-
-While brooding over these things, the night passed silently away.
-With the grey dawn, Peralta relieved me, and we crept in our turn
-under the half-deck, and slept until the sun rose high into the
-unclouded heaven, and the piragua was staggering along under reefed
-canvas, bending over to the whistling trade-wind, and leaping from
-sea to sea, like a hunted stag. During the day, little of note
-occurred. Peralta avoided taking me further into his confidence, and
-I had tact enough to see that I ought to refrain from seeming to
-intrude upon his mystery. As I watched him, however, I often saw him
-bite his thin lips, and wrinkle his forehead, and clench his hand,
-as if distressing thoughts haunted him; and at last he broke out,
-addressing nobody in particular, but speaking moodily to himself—
-
-‘Those poor fellows!’ he cried, ‘those poor fellows Juan and Blanco—I
-would give every pearl the venture hath brought that they were safe
-and sound in this piragua. The Spaniards will hang them; nay, indeed,
-it may have been already done, and their bodies are swinging in this
-same sea-breeze!’
-
-Here Jenipa interposed very respectfully, and said that no effort we
-could have possibly made would have sufficed to rescue the Indians,
-and that we had nothing to reproach ourselves with on that score.
-
-‘No, no,’ said Peralta. ‘We could not have got them out of trouble;
-but we have been the cause that they fell into it.’
-
-He pondered for a minute. Then putting his hand into his bosom, he
-drew it forth, the hollow of the palm filled with small pearls, all
-glistening in the sun, like beads of frozen milk. Then he poured the
-precious morsels from one hand to the other, the pearls pattering and
-rattling like chips of shivered glass and pebbles, and began again to
-speak, like a man who talks in his sleep.
-
-‘Ay,’ he cried, ‘and you will sparkle in the coronets of nobles, or
-mayhap you will rise and fall on the white bosom of some peerless
-beauty across the western sea. Little will she think how her
-braveries have been won. Little will she think that the gems of her
-adornment are but as coagulated drops of human blood. Red, red, you
-ought to be, and not of that lying virgin whiteness—red, red, you
-ought to be, as the guilt of him who hath purveyed you, and the blood
-of the hapless men who, ere now, are doubtless but as lumps of brown
-carrion—only good to feed the vultures and the crows!’
-
-At this, I observed Jenipa and Disco exchange curious glances with
-each other; but Peralta, after musing for a short space further, put
-the pearls back into their hiding-place, and resumed, to a certain
-degree, his usual manner.
-
-‘I doubt not,’ he said to me, presently, ‘but that your acuteness
-hath taught you much of what last night you burned to know. The two
-poor savages, of whom I spoke, were indeed my agents among their
-brethren; and, thanks to their ingenuity and courage, many a rare
-pearl hath come to my wallet, instead of the poke of their Spanish
-task-masters. But all is over now. While I remained on shore, I
-risked the danger borne by my confederates. Had it been within the
-power of man to have saved them, I would have perilled limbs and life
-to bring them off, but it fell out otherwise. What is writ, is writ.
-Adieu, poor Juan and Blanco, and may you find the next world a better
-one than this.’
-
-Having pronounced this curious sort of funeral oration, Peralta
-straightway resumed his former demeanour, and I never heard him
-allude to the subject again. Meantime, we bounded merrily across
-the ocean, masts bending, canvas swelling, and sheet and haulyard
-cracking and straining; the blue heaven, with not a cloud to fleck
-it, all a blaze of azure light and glory above, and the crystal sea
-foaming, and tumbling, and gambolling beneath the swift piragua,
-as, with dripping prow and polished sides, she tore away upon
-her headlong course. My spirits, long drooping under captivity,
-now came flushing back, sending the young hot blood tingling
-through my veins. I leaped and danced about the piragua for very
-cheery-heartedness—Peralta smiling slily at my antics—and sometimes
-lifting up my voice, I sang an echoing chorus to the music of wind
-and wave! ‘A day or two,’ I thought, ‘and I shall see, sleeping in
-the smooth water landward of the Palisades, my gallant schooner,
-which I love, and hear ringing from beneath her snow-white awning the
-cheery voices of my old comrades, of Stout Jem, the true-hearted, and
-Nicky Hamstring, the merry-minded!’
-
-Alas! not so fast, Leonard Lindsay—not so fast! There are perils and
-sufferings for you, by sea and land, ere you step upon English ground
-again!
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXV.
-
-THE PIRAGUA IS PICKED UP BY A GREAT PRIVATEER, AND I FIND MYSELF
-AMONG NEW SHIPMATES.
-
-
-We were within a day’s sail of Jamaica. At the setting of the sun
-we had seen, even from our low vessel, the distant outline of the
-Blue Mountains. Peralta had the middle watch. I roused up about an
-hour and a half before sunrise, and found the piragua heaving upon
-smooth, oily swells, all unruffled even by a puff of wind. There was
-a great dank mist around us, packing upon the water as thick as smoke
-from a man-of-war’s broadside, and the very air seemed loaded with
-chill damp. I walked up and down the small fore deck of the piragua,
-trying, in my thin garments, to keep myself warm, and whistling for
-a breeze to blow away to leeward the filthy fog, which seemed, as it
-were, to enclose us round, and to cling and settle in its densest
-volume about the piragua. Standing at the bows, I could not see the
-stern, and as for the heads of the sails they were lost in the thick
-opaque air. It was curious to gaze out upon the water as the black
-looking undulations of the sea rolled under us, the mist seeming to
-rise and fall with them, and sometimes boiling and eddying from the
-motion of the waves, although not a breath of wind strayed over the
-ocean. I might have been upon duty about half an hour, when I almost
-leaped from the deck with amazement to hear suddenly, coming from
-whence I knew not, but ringing shrilly through the thick air, a loud
-cry or scream, like that uttered by a man in mortal anguish.
-
-‘Disco,’ I shouted, ‘did you hear that? What was that cry?’
-
-But the Indian, instead of answering me, stood dumb and trembling, as
-though struck with terror. Instantly the cry was repeated, and even
-louder and more vehemently than before.
-
-‘It is a spirit,’ said the Indian. ‘It is some bad spirit of the fog.
-It will come to us and kill us.’
-
-But I heeded not the superstition of the ignorant creature, and
-made but one bound to where Peralta lay sound asleep, clutching and
-shaking him to arouse him, and telling him in the same breath that
-there was either a ship or a boat close aboard of us in the fog.
-The pearl merchant and Jenipa were upon their legs in a moment, and
-for the space of about ten minutes we listened with all our ears,
-but heard no sound, other than the flapping of our sails and the
-creaking of the yards, as they rubbed and swayed against the masts.
-It was odd that, although both Disco and myself heard the cry so
-distinctly repeated, we neither of us could tell the direction from
-which it appeared to come. Perhaps the fog affected sounds passing
-through it. At all events, although we got out the oars, we knew not
-in which way to row, so as to put as much sea as possible between a
-ship which might very likely be an enemy, and which would certainly
-be more than a match for the light piragua and her crew of four. All
-this while the dawn was gradually brightening through the mist; the
-fog, which before was of a pitchy darkness, becoming gradually of a
-pale grey hue, and then lifting and opening here and there, so as to
-show lanes, as it were, and patches of clear air, which, in the next
-moment, would be again filled up by rolling masses of the vapour.
-However, the mist was evidently thinning as the sun approached to
-the horizon, and we watched warily to catch the first glimpse of our
-unknown neighbour. Presently, the fog began to change its cold white
-hue for a tinge or blush of warm and golden light, which appeared, as
-it were, to penetrate and pervade the vapour, and by which we knew
-that the sun had risen; while, at the same time, our glimpses into
-the ever-shifting lanes and clear spaces continually being formed by
-the motion of the seething wreaths and masses of vapour, becoming
-every moment longer and clearer—Peralta, who was standing upon the
-starboard gunwale of the piragua, suddenly exclaimed, in a low,
-earnest tone:
-
-‘There! look there!’
-
-We all turned round at once, and saw, not thirty fathoms from
-us, the dusky broadside and towering rigging of a ship. She was
-gracefully rocking upon the long seas, the mist all curling round
-her, and floating, as it appeared, in blurring patches and masses
-among her extended sails, so that the masts and all the fabric of
-spars and canvas which they bore were half lost in the bewildering
-vapour. We had no time, however, to make any very minute examination
-of the stranger. She saw us as soon as we saw her, and half a dozen
-men, clustering into the main rigging, shouted out, in French and
-English, that we should pull the piragua alongside. I looked at
-Peralta. He slightly shrugged his shoulders. ‘If there were but a
-bladder full of wind,’ he said.
-
-‘Ho! the piragua ahoy!’ was now again hailed from the strange
-ship—‘come alongside, d’ye hear, or it will be the worse for you.’
-
-This threat had hardly been uttered, when, as if to back it, a cannon
-was fired from the maindeck, and we heard the ball, with a loud
-whistling hiss, pass above our masts. But the discharge of that gun
-had an effect which seemed almost miraculous upon the fog, clearing
-away, and, as it were, condensing and annihilating, by the shock of
-the explosion the vapour all around—so that we saw, very plainly, a
-goodly ship of three masts, carrying at least twelve cannons upon
-a side, with topsails and top-gallant-sails spread, but the yards
-braced clumsily, the canvas ill set, and much of the rigging in
-a loose and disorderly condition—the jib indeed hanging in great
-festoons down from the bowsprit—so that when the ship plunged by the
-head, the canvas dipped into the sea, from which it would presently
-arise, the water pouring from the belly of the sail as from a tub. On
-board this disorderly-looking craft there seemed to be a great swarm
-of men, who suddenly clustered upon the bulwarks and in the rigging
-to gaze at us, and one of whom, a varlet with long unkempt hair and
-torn and dirty linen doublet, suddenly screamed out—
-
-‘Why, comrades, never believe your eyes—if it be not Old Rumbold, of
-Port Royal in Jamaica, and Heaven knows how many places besides.
-What cheer, Old Rumbold?—Hast been a privateering in a bark canoe—or
-chaffering with and cheating the honest Indians of the Main?’
-
-Peralta seemed in no way put out by this recognition, for he
-immediately took off his hat very gallantly, and called out that he
-was heartily glad to meet with so many friends and gallant gentlemen
-adventurers on the high seas. Upon which the men on board the ship
-cheered lustily, and shouted to Peralta or Rumbold that he was an
-honest fellow, and that he must come aboard, with all his people,
-and that we should have a jovial cruise together. I watched the
-pearl-merchant, and saw that he was in reality much concerned at this
-unexpected stoppage of our voyage.
-
-‘Had it not been for that cursed fog,’ he whispered, ‘this would
-not have happened. But these fellows are savages if their temper be
-crossed. We must e’en row with the tide and humour them.’
-
-Accordingly the piragua was speedily floating alongside the great
-ship, and, following Rumbold, as I may now call him, I clambered up
-the high sides. But what a sight did the deck present to me—a sailor
-hitherto accustomed to orderly vessels. Strewn everywhere about were
-great heaps of luggage and ship stores—trunks and mails mingled
-with coils of rope, and masses of sails—buckets, boat anchors,
-flags, handspikes, and what not—while, tumbled hither and thither
-in this chaos, sprawled more than a score of drunken seamen, some
-of them fast asleep and snoring, with empty bottles and glasses
-still grasped in their hands—others, still sitting up, babbling and
-singing, in maudlin fashion, over their liquor—or disputing fiercely
-with thickened speech and bloodshot eyes. The relics of a feast lay
-scattered over the decks, slippery with the wine and liquors spilt
-upon them. There were broken glasses and empty flasks, the smashed
-fragments of tobacco-pipes, divers dice-boxes, and packs of greasy
-cards. But the principal object on which my attention dwelt was the
-form of a stalwart, big-limbed sailor, who lay with his head resting
-on the knee of a man who was tending a hurt upon his temples. Looking
-more closely, I saw that the wounded man had received a desperate
-slash with a knife, which had laid open the side of his forehead and
-part of the cheek, narrowly missing the eye. From this gash the blood
-was pouring fast, while the surgeon, for such he was, who tended the
-wounded man, cleaned the ghastly cut, from time to time, with sponges
-dipped in hot water, while he prepared his instruments to sew it up.
-The patient was insensible, breathing hard and loud, and having his
-glazed eyes open, and gleaming with a wild, vacant stare. As I gazed,
-I immediately comprehended that it was the cry uttered by this man,
-as he was wounded, which had alarmed us in the piragua, and looking
-towards the bows, I saw a fellow, with his doublet-sleeve all bloody,
-being marched off in custody by a group of his comrades—all high in
-oath at the cowardly hound of a Portuguese, (as they called him,) who
-had used his knife instead of his fists in a quarrel among friends.
-
-Meantime, Rumbold seemed to be heartily welcomed by the more sober
-part of the crew, with the captain, as I judged him, at their head.
-This captain was a long gaunt man, with a slouching gait, and lank
-black hair falling straight down upon his shoulders. He had such a
-squint that it was, as I afterwards knew, a common saying in the
-ship about Le Chiffon Rouge—for such he, being a Frenchman, was
-called—that no one could tell at any moment whether he was looking
-forward or aft, up to the vane on the mast-head, or down into the
-hold. This ill-favoured personage—for besides his squinting eye he
-had an ugly hare lip, showing tusks which would not have been out
-of place in the jaw of a boar,—this ill-favoured personage, I say,
-protested loudly that his good friend Rumbold must positively sail
-out the cruize with them—that he would not be denied—and that the
-hills of Jamaica being in sight, for the mist had rapidly cleared
-away with the rising of the sun, the two Indians could very well
-carry home the piragua, while hammocks would be slung aboard for
-the worthy pearl merchant and his friend—meaning me. The captain
-was well seconded in these propositions by the chief mate, who was
-an Englishman, a coarse, fat personage, with bristling red hair, a
-ferocious expression, and a loud harsh voice. He was called Jerry,
-and I soon found that he was the real commander of the ship; Le
-Chiffon Rouge yielding to his judgment in all cases of emergency, and
-the pair keeping very close together. Now, for my own part, I was
-much puzzled to know the reason of this welcome, which was so much
-warmer than we wished for. If the ship was a friendly one, why did
-not she go her way and leave us to go ours, instead of detaining us
-prisoners; for that was what the affair actually came to, on board.
-I saw that Rumbold’s countenance was clouded, and that, although he
-put a good face on the matter, he would have freely given a round
-sum for a start of a league or so in the piragua. But wishing was
-useless. The Indians, who continued in the canoe, were, to their
-great astonishment, ordered to run for Port Royal, and to take word
-that Mr. Rumbold had joined the good ship, ‘Saucy Susan,’ for a short
-run down by the Mosquito coast, and that she might be expected in
-Jamaica in a few weeks. By this time the morning trade-wind was
-beginning to blow, and the piragua speedily crept away, wafted by its
-first faint fannings. Then Jerry suddenly began to bestir himself—
-
-‘Here,’ he shouted, ‘here men, clear away the decks, fore and aft.
-You, boatswain, get the yards braced, and put all things aloft
-ship-shape and Bristol fashion. What! d——n my eyes, is the ship to
-be always in this cursed mess? Here, you two boatswain’s mates, come
-and kick these drunken hogs. Overboard with barrel and bucket. Draw
-water, will you, and souse these fellows who are littering the deck,
-soundly. Curse and confound me, but a parcel of wild Indians would
-have more decency aboard ship! Doctor, how is that fellow’s skull?
-We shall serve out the thief who cut him, presently. Come, men, look
-alive there, or by all the devils dancing in hell, I’ll make you
-feel the flat of my cutlass!’
-
-At this energetic speech there was a general bustle on deck. About
-half of the drunken fellows staggered to their feet, and began to
-tumble about, half asleep, lurching and pitching against each other,
-owing to the roll of the ship.
-
-‘Quick, will you there!’ Jerry roared; ‘get the buckets full, and
-baptise these brandy kegs;’ pointing to the drunkards, who were still
-sleeping. In a minute a dozen pails were over the ship’s sides, and
-immediately, amid shouts of jeering and laughter, copious floods
-of the cooling brine were dashed over the heads and bodies of the
-snorers, who started up all bewildered, shouting and spluttering,
-half-choked, and swearing at such scurvy treatment. However, in a
-few minutes a wonderful transformation was effected—the decks were
-cleared—those of the crew who had not sufficiently slept off their
-debauch to be able to resume their duty, were tumbled down the
-hatches to their hammocks—the yards were braced properly for the
-course which we were lying—a steady-looking old seaman was at the
-wheel, and the ‘Saucy Susan’ began to move slowly upon her course,
-rising heavily to the seas, and butting at them with her great broad
-bows as they came rolling past.
-
-Meantime, I kept alongside of Rumbold—to whom the captain was
-explaining, with great gravity, that having last night taken a
-small Spanish sloop, aboard which there was very excellent wine,
-the greater part of the crew had been drunk all night, a thing,
-he admitted, not very seamanlike: ‘But what then—what could he
-do? _Messieurs les aventuriers_ would have their way.’ Presently,
-however, stepping forward to confer with Jerry, who was certainly
-bringing the ship into hand again, in the style of a man who knows
-his business, Rumbold whispered to me:
-
-‘I know something of this ship. She is manned by the worst set of
-rogues who sail from Jamaica. There may be some honest men aboard,
-but both the Frenchman and Jerry, his mate, are as great rascals as
-ever rode colt foaled of an acorn, and I doubt it not but that a
-crew of their choosing will be found to match bravely.’
-
-I inquired what he thought were the reasons which induced them to
-detain us on board?
-
-‘Why, as to that,’ says he, ‘I doubt not but that some of the rogues
-have a shrewd guess where I come from, and that I have pearls of
-price about me. I hardly think they would rob me openly and divide
-the booty in the face of day, but there are dozens of these cursed
-jail birds who would think no more of drawing a knife across a
-man’s weasand while he slept, if that would help them to filch a
-brass-farthing’s worth, than I would of smoking a whiff of tobacco.’
-
-Then Rumbold asked whether I recognised the young fellow who first
-hailed him by name? and presently pointed him out, laughing and
-talking to Jerry. ‘I know the rascal well,’ said the pearl merchant.
-‘He hath nimble wits and nimble fingers. I warrant ’twas he first
-tipped Jerry and the captain the wink in this matter. If it be so,
-depend upon it that the three intend to keep the thing snug to
-themselves, and share the plunder—that is, if they can get it.’
-
-Our converse was broken up by the captain and mate walking aft
-together. The vessel was by this time put into proper trim, and
-standing on her course, with sails very well set, and swelling gaily
-in the breeze. The mate looked to windward. ‘I think the weather
-will hold steady,’ he said. Immediately, the captain shouted out to
-the boatswain to call all hands, and, presently, in answer to that
-shrill, sharp whistle, which penetrates down to the very keel of a
-ship, the crew tumbled upon deck, most of them being by this time
-sober enough, and trooped aft to the break of the poop, upon which
-Le Chiffon Rouge and Jerry stood. The ship was then hove to, with
-her broad maintop-sail laid to the mast, and Le Chiffon Rouge taking
-off his three-cornered hat, as it was the custom of the captain of a
-privateer to do when he addressed the whole crew, began to speak in a
-smooth, plausible fashion, to this effect—
-
-‘Last night, gentlemen, as you well know, the “Saucy Susan” captured
-a Spanish sloop, out of which we took what we wanted, and then
-dismissed her. You cannot complain, any of you, that you had not as
-much of the good wine which we found aboard the sloop, as you could
-swill, with plenty of time and space to drink it in. But, gentlemen,
-here hath an ugly accident turned out in your revelry, and which it
-behoves me to inquire into. One of our honourable company hath drawn
-his knife, and wounded a comrade, in his cups, and that, by all the
-rules of privateersmen, must be punished. It is not that I much care
-about a kick on the shins, or a box on the ears, given or taken when
-the wine cup is full, and the dice-box rattling—but cold steel,
-comrades, we must keep for the Spaniards, and not get into the habit
-of polishing our knives against each other’s ribs.’
-
-The crew applauded this address, which seemed reasonable enough; but
-Rumbold whispered to me, that he would lay his life upon it that
-either Le Chiffon Rouge, or Jerry, had some cause of spite against
-the Portuguese; otherwise, said he, the whole ship’s company might
-hack the flesh off each other’s bones without interference.
-
-‘Now then,’ continued the scowling captain, ‘some of you fetch Vasco,
-of Lisbon, hither, and Doctor, do you bring up Shambling Ned.’ So,
-in a few minutes, the Portuguese, with his hands tied behind him,
-was hurried along the deck, and the wounded man came out of the
-cabin, leaning upon the surgeon, and looking very pale, his blood
-still clotted in jelly-looking masses among his long hair. Vasco, in
-spite of his great name, seemed to me to be as hang-dog looking a
-rascal as ever I saw, with a low flat forehead, and only one eye. He
-was a lithe, slightly made young fellow, with a thin, ragged beard
-and drooping moustache. When he was confronted with the captain
-and Jerry, the latter cast a look upon him so full of hate and
-spite, that I soon perceived that Rumbold was in the right in his
-conjecture. The Portuguese never appeared to notice the wounded man
-at all.
-
-‘Now, then,’ the captain began, ‘you, Shambling Ned, ‘tell us how
-you came by that trench upon your forehead.’
-
-But Shambling Ned, who was, as I have said, a stout seaman, but with
-a hitch in his gait, from whence he obtained his nickname, gave but a
-very confused account of the transaction. What between the quantity
-of wine which he had drunk, and the quantity of blood which he had
-lost, his wits appeared to be still gone a wool-gathering, and all
-that he could say was, that he had been playing dice for small stakes
-with the Portuguese, when they had a quarrel about a cast, and that
-blows had passed; but who had struck first he really did not know;
-that in the middle of the scuffle, however, when they were staggering
-about among their comrades and tripping over the masses of goods and
-stores which lay upon the deck, he suddenly saw a knife in the hand
-of his adversary, and, almost at the same instant, he had received
-the violent cut upon his head, from which the hot blood came pouring
-down; that after that he knew nothing, until he was brought to
-himself by the smart of the surgeon’s instrument sewing up the wound.
-
-The evidence of several of the seamen was then taken, but they all
-gave different accounts; some maintaining that Vasco had begun the
-fray, and others that Shambling Ned had first seized up a knife
-himself, so that I saw very plainly that the whole affair was
-the effect of a drunken squabble, in which one was probably as
-much to blame as another. At last, however, the young man who had
-recognised Rumbold, stood forth, and I saw very plainly the glance of
-intelligence which passed between him and Jerry.
-
-‘Now for Tommy Nixon’s testimony,’said the captain; ‘and I warrant
-that he will speak more to the purpose than these noddies there,
-who seem to make no more use of their eyes than if they were boiled
-gooseberries!’
-
-So Nixon began to speak in a low, whining sort of tone, professing
-great regret for the disturbance, and particularly that Vasco, whom
-he said he loved as though he had been his own brother, should
-have so shamefully outraged all the laws observed by gentlemen
-adventurers. Still the truth was the truth; and if he must tell what
-he knew, it was this, that Vasco having tried to cheat Shambling Ned
-out of the piece of eight which they were playing for, and having
-been reproached by the latter for his meanness, had straightway hit
-Ned in the face; and that when Ned had risen to his feet to defend
-himself, the Portuguese had immediately drawn his knife and struck
-the blow, swearing at the same time that he would like to do as much
-for every Englishman on board the ship.
-
-At this, the Portuguese, who had hitherto stood, with downcast looks,
-listening to all the evidence, burst out in violent wrath, sputtering
-vehemently forth his broken English, and almost screaming in his
-excitement—
-
-‘That a lie—a lie, a lie!’ he shouted. ‘A lie, Nixon—Jerry tell you
-say that—you liars both I—I no wish to stab my shipmates, but Jerry
-hate me, and you Jerry friend—and you lie!’
-
-There was a murmur among the men, for it was not difficult to see
-that Jerry and Nixon had great influence over them, and many a
-clenched hand was raised against the Portuguese, who, I believe, had
-certainly cut open Ned’s head, not, however, with premeditation, but
-in the scuffle and the heat of blood. Meantime, Nixon turned up his
-eyes to heaven, and shook his uplifted hands, as who should say,
-‘Patience—patience, friends, I can afford to bear the calumny.’ Not
-so Jerry, however. His nature was different; and so, dashing down his
-hat upon the deck in his rage, with his moustaches bristling, and his
-flashing eyes fixed upon the culprit, he roared—
-
-‘Here be a pitiful hound of a Portuguese for you, who dare raise his
-murdering arm to stab a freeborn Englishman, and then asperse the
-witnesses of the cruel deed! If he remain unpunished for it, I leave
-this ship, and I would advise all them who don’t take the part of the
-white-livered scoundrel to do the same—that is, if they don’t want to
-feel his murdering knife tickling their ribs!’
-
-‘Jerry,’ cried out Vasco, all at once, ‘I know what you mean very
-well. You no care for either blow or stab, that you no get yourself.
-You stab Nickel, the Dutchman, in Tortugas; you shoot John Cox off
-St. Christopher’s. You a pretty fellow to talk!’
-
-But here Jerry interrupted him. ‘Now, then,’ he roared, ‘what are
-you about there, that you don’t clap a marline-spike in the fellow’s
-jaws? I suppose he intends to bully us out of the ship!’
-
-Instantly half-a-dozen stout fellows threw themselves upon Vasco, who
-still, however, contrived, before he was effectually gagged, to yell
-out in broken sentences—
-
-‘Jerry—I say, Jerry—you do this because I prevent you marry my
-countrywoman, who keep tavern at Tortugas, and tell her, you have
-one, two, three wife already!’
-
-But Jerry’s orders were speedily obeyed, and the Portuguese—with a
-stout rope passed through his mouth, keeping the jaws wide open,
-and made fast to the back of his head—could only grin and flash his
-one eye upon his successful persecutor. Jerry was now in his glory.
-His ugly face was all lighted up with the excitement of gratified
-spite; and roaring to the men, that now they would teach a cowardly
-Portuguese to lift his hand upon his betters he proposed that, as
-a punishment for what he had done, Vasco should be made to run the
-gauntlet, from the mizen-mast forward to the heel of the bowsprit
-and back again. This proposal was received with acclamations by the
-rest of the crew, most of whom were brutal fellows enough, and quite
-under the thumb of Jerry, who, as I have said, was really captain,
-though he pretended to be only second in command; and so, presently,
-Le Chiffon Rouge, after whispering to his mate, ordered an old pair
-of topgallant-sail haulyards to be cut up into lengths of about three
-feet each. This was soon done, and then each man was armed with a
-piece of the strong stiff rope, with which, of course, one could
-strike as with a cudgel. The culprit eyed all these preparations in
-sulky silence, and made no resistance, even when Jerry himself, with
-a devil-like leer of delight in his eyes, tore off his doublet and
-shirt, leaving his swarthy back bare for the blows which awaited it.
-
-‘That man,’ whispered Rumbold to me, indicating Jerry, ‘is as great a
-fool as he is a brute. These Portuguese are not the fellows to forget
-a scar marked upon their backs. Sooner or later, unless he have very
-marvellous good luck, the knife which cut open Shambling Ned’s head
-will make itself acquainted with Mr. Jerry’s inward anatomy also.’
-In this remark I very cordially agreed; but Jerry seemed to be under
-very little uneasiness on the score, for he went joking about,
-showing the men how to grasp the ropes, so as to lay on the most
-vigorous cuts. The punishment of running the gauntlet is one which
-its executors can make as light or as heavy as they choose; and in
-the present instance the culprit did not seem, judging from most of
-the faces around him, to have much to hope for; while those of the
-crew who had, perhaps, given and received over many knife-slashes
-themselves, to have any very great horror of the crime, stood too
-much in awe of Jerry to favour the culprit.
-
-At length, all being in readiness, and the crew, to the number of
-fifty-five, ranged in a double line, one on the larboard and the
-other on the starboard side of the deck, the hands of the Portuguese
-were tied behind him, and his ankles hampered so as to prevent his
-taking but little steps. Then Jerry, whose duty it was, as mate, took
-the poor devil by the ear, and, giving it a wrench, the Portuguese
-shuffled on until he stood before the first man in the line.
-
-‘Now, Jack,’ said Jerry, ‘here’s the mark for you; let’s see what
-pith you have got in your muscles.’
-
-So the seaman addressed flourished his rope cudgel aloft, and then
-brought it down upon the naked back of the Portuguese, with a blow
-which echoed over the deck, and raised a broad white-coloured bar of
-flesh, which started up from the shoulder almost to the loin. The
-sufferer staggered under the weight of the stroke, and immediately
-all his back, except just where the scourge fell, turned to a
-burning red; but he uttered no sound.
-
-‘Very well struck, Jack,’ said the mate, and then dragged the
-prisoner forward to receive the second blow. Ten minutes passed over
-at least, before the Portuguese had got through one-half of his
-punishment, by arriving in the bows of the ship; for Jerry prolonged
-the torture by stopping to joke with each man before he struck, and
-advising him to lay it on well. The whole scene was a very brutal
-one, and I would gladly have left the deck if I could. There was no
-escape, however, and I saw the poor wretch flogged up one side of the
-ship and down the other, each blow given by the full strength of an
-unwearied arm. When the prisoner had completed his miserable walk, he
-was trembling all over; great drops of sweat were running down his
-face, and his back, although the skin was not actually cut, was a
-mass of ugly-coloured swellings.
-
-‘He will faint in a minute,’ said Rumbold, ‘and cheat Jerry of the
-finishing stroke’
-
-But, as if the mate had been aware of his danger, he hurriedly
-flourished his scourge round his head, so as to give it the full
-swing of his brawny arm, and then brought it down upon the sufferer
-with a buffet which might have broken the spine of a bull, and which
-drove the wretch who received it flat upon the deck, where he lay
-stark and motionless.
-
-‘Well,’ said Le Chiffon Rouge, who, being captain, had not personally
-interfered in the punishment, ‘it is to be hoped that Monsieur Vasco
-hath had a lesson upon the disadvantages of drawing knives upon
-comrades.’
-
-‘And upon the disadvantages of making enemies of more powerful men
-than himself,’ whispered Rumbold. ‘I dare say the fellow is a rascal,
-but he was flogged, not for cutting open his shipmate’s head, but for
-preventing the mate from getting a fourth wife.’
-
-‘Here, men,’ roared Jerry, as he twitched up the head of the
-prostrate man by the hair, and then allowed it to fall with a thump
-upon the deck, ‘slush this carrion with a bucketfull of salt water,
-and then tumble him down the hatchway. I warrant he don’t lie on his
-back in his hammock for a month of Sundays.’
-
-These orders were speedily carried into effect, and the Portuguese
-having been taken below, the maintopsail was filled, and the ship
-again stood upon her course.
-
-In the course of the day, Jerry and Nixon came up to me together, and
-proposed, very civilly, that, as I was a sailor, I should join the
-ship for the cruise; in which case, they told me, that I should have
-my regular share of the prize-money as if I had been on board since
-they went to sea, about three months ago. Of course I had nothing
-for it but to agree to the proposal, although I loathed the whole
-set among whom I had been thus so strangely thrown. ‘Oh,’ thought I,
-‘things were different on board the “Will-o’-the-Wisp,” with Stout
-Jem for a commander, and a hearty set of fellows under him, as honest
-as they were brave.’ But there was no help for it, and so my name was
-duly enrolled in the great book of the ‘Saucy Susan.’
-
-This being done, I of course took up my quarters with the crew, while
-Rumbold was accommodated in the great cabin. It was truly a virtuous
-company in which I found myself enlisted, almost every second man
-of them having left England after having made it too hot to hold
-him. One young fellow, with a ready laugh and a quick eye, told me
-that he had been thrice left for execution in Newgate, and was each
-time saved by the interest of friends. At last he was sent to the
-plantations, where he was purchased by a confederate, and set at
-liberty directly. Another man told me, that he had broken half the
-jails in England, and boasted that there never was smith made a lock
-which he could not pick with a rusty nail. A third fellow had been
-a foot-pad on Blackheath, and fled the country with the Hue and Cry
-at his heels. There were many more who had been thieves and rogues
-all their lives, having, indeed, been brought up to that business
-in the streets of London, in which they had been, as it were, born,
-and then allowed to run wild like young savages—their hands against
-every man, and every man’s hands against them. By one of these men
-I was told, that he never knew the name of either his father or
-mother. The first thing he could remember was, that he used to fight
-with dogs in Lincoln’s Inn Fields for garbage and bones. He slept
-upon bunks in the streets in summer, and among the ashes in the
-glass-houses in winter, until having amassed money by many fortunate
-robberies, for, quoth he, ‘my street education made me sharp,’ he got
-to live in White Friars, the Mint, and places of that kind, where he
-cared little for either warrants or thief-takers. ‘I promise you,’
-quoth he, ‘the Lord Chief Justice cannot take a man there unless
-he come backed by a company of musketeers.’ Another of our most
-virtuous crew had been a highwayman, and used to infest Gradshill,
-particularly after a ship had been paid off at Chatham, and the
-seamen came swarming up on the London road to expend their money in
-town debauchery. Having been apprehended sleeping in an inn on the
-borders of Epping Forest, where it seems he sometimes lay in wait for
-Cambridge scholars journeying past, a prosecutor was found to come
-forward against him at Newgate in very curious fashion. He told me
-the story himself.
-
-‘There were six of us,’ quoth he, ‘and they had suspicions against
-all, but no witnesses. The fact was, that they knew very well that
-we had walked Watling Street, and perhaps other roads also, but they
-could find no one to prove it. So this was the plan the lawyers hit
-on. They published a notice in the _London Gazette_, to say, that six
-persons, reputed highwaymen, would be publicly exhibited in Newgate,
-dressed in riding suits, and just as they appeared on the road, so
-that any one who had been recently robbed might be able to tell
-whether the thief was in the clutches of the law. So the day came,
-and we were made, every man of us, to don our riding gear, and then
-with boot and red doublet, pistols at our belts, and just a morsel of
-crape dangling from our hats, we were paraded up and down the long
-galleries, while a crowd of ladies and court gallants examined us
-with their glasses, and joked and laughed and coquetted, and told us
-to turn, first one way and then the other, and said, as each passed
-by, “No, no, he is not the fellow who robbed me; bring up the next,
-good master turnkey, and make him turn well round, so that we may see
-his face to our satisfaction.” It would have been very well, however,
-if all the remarks had been like these. But, one by one, my poor
-companions were marked out and carried away. “Here be the very man
-who eased me of my purse on Gadshill,” quoth a fat grazier of Kent,
-and stout Tom Clinch was straightway taken to the hold.’ “O’ my life,
-the rascal who stopped her ladyship’s carriage on Hounslow, and made
-us all hand over watches and cash,” says a mincing carpet knight, and
-the fate of brave Moonlight Dick was settled. Even thus our misdeeds
-came home to us; so that in the space of an hour and a half I stood
-alone, and then, the crowd of spectators beginning to disperse, I
-had good hope that my lucky stars would prevail, and that I would
-be allowed to go forth for lack of evidence. But alas! in the nick
-of time, just as the captain of Newgate was thinking of turning me
-adrift with a kick and an oath, up there trips a dainty gentlewoman,
-whose face I knew in an instant, for I had said some few flattering
-words in praise of the brilliancy of her eyes, and what not, to which
-she listened nothing loath, while I conveyed to my own pouch a golden
-locket she wore, filled with hair, which I warrant you grew never on
-the bald head of her spouse, an old lawyer of Lincoln’s Inn. So she
-stared at me very hard, while I twisted my features first one way and
-then the other, now cocking my eye, now leering it, so that I saw she
-was mightily puzzled. But just then old Diggory, the thief-taker,
-fetched me a wipe over the chops; “Take that, you mumper,” says he,
-“and keep your ugly face quiet till the gentlewoman decide.” But it
-was no such easy matter for her to pronounce; and at length quo’
-my madam, as cool as an’ she had been in a raree-show, and wished
-to hear the lion roar, “Make him speak, good master keeper, make
-him speak, and I shall know the voice.” So says old Diggory, “Come,
-Helter-Skelter Joe, you hear what the lady says, tip us a few tongue
-flourishes.” So I commenced grumbling and snorting through my nose,
-but it wouldn’t do. “Stow that,” says Diggory, “or we shall have
-the hangman in with his cat-o’-nine tails.” Then I set to gabbling
-in a high treble, like a dame of Billingsgate whose comrades had
-stolen her fish,—but it was all in vain, they made me talk in my
-own voice at last, and quoth the bona roba as soon as she heard the
-patter, “Oh, good master jailer, it is the villain, indeed.” So I was
-tried—condemned—left for execution, and I can tell you it took both
-money and friends to prevent my going up Holborn Hill in a cart.’
-
-There were others of the crew, however, more reputable characters,
-so far as regarded actual roguery, but they were one and all a
-devil-may-care set, without thought or morals, and only anxious
-for plunder and debauchery. Several of them had been kidnapped, as
-they told me, from Bristol, Norwich, Newcastle, London, and other
-places. These were all of them youths under twenty, and two or three
-of them had been, they said, sold by their parents. They had all
-of them, however, managed, after serving for different periods, to
-make their escape from Virginia, and to find their way into the
-West Indian seas. They gave doleful accounts of their treatment in
-the plantations—how they had been flogged and starved, and of the
-great numbers who had died from fever and sun strokes. Those who had
-been kidnapped frequently fared worse than the convicted felons,
-because the former, being generally of tender years, were less able
-to protect themselves than the old thieves and vagabonds who were
-transported thither from the jails of England. The reader will easily
-understand that a great number of the crew of the ‘Saucy Susan’ were
-but very poor sailors, and clumsy fellows in blowing weather aloft.
-Indeed, it was sometimes rare sport to see the boatswain and his
-mates, armed with big rattans, thrashing the skulkers out of their
-hammocks, and chasing them up to their duty from all the secret
-holes and hiding-places in the ship; while Jerry would be storming
-and raving on the poop, and swearing that he would shoot the last man
-who got out on the yard in reefing topsails. Among these lubberly
-rogues, however, there were a handful of prime sailors, chiefly
-old men, who had swung in hammocks nigh half a century, and had
-been tossed on every sea all round the world. The great fault they
-had was, that not a single man of the whole lot would keep sober
-if he had an opportunity of getting drunk. For all that, however,
-Jerry was forced to depend upon these sailors, his ‘Mother Carey’s
-chickens,’ as he called them, for the safe navigation of the ship;
-knowing very well that, if the rest of the crew were but fresh
-water seamen, they were as good, with cutlasses and boarding-pikes
-in their hands, as the most daring veterans of the sea. With these
-ancient mariners I chiefly consorted, we forming a company who kept
-somewhat aloof from the rake-helly set we lived among, and during
-the many calm midwatches I kept on board the ‘Saucy Susan,’ I picked
-up many legends and tales of the sea from these old men, who had
-passed long lives upon the face of the waters. I have already given
-to the reader one story, as a sample of the kind of legends which
-we Buccaneers loved to listen to, and I shall here add another of
-the same sort, relating to a notion which was very common amongst
-seamen of the time of which I speak, but which has now, I believe,
-except with the most ignorant of the class, wholly died away. I mean,
-the idea that particular capes or headlands running out into the
-sea are haunted by evil demons, who hate ships to pass by, and who,
-therefore, raise tempests to beat them back, and prevent them from
-doubling the point, or spot of land in question. This belief, no
-doubt, rose from the general stormy nature of the seas off capes and
-outstretching tongues of land. The two great capes of the world—the
-Cape of Good Hope and Cape Horn, many sailors believed to be haunted
-by most powerful demons, and regarded the awful gales which blew,
-and the fearful seas which run thereabouts, as nothing but the work
-of these Cape devils, if I may call them so, not remembering that
-the phenomena in question are simply the effect of geographical
-position and the unchanging laws of the elements. However, I proceed
-to my story, merely premising that the seaman who told it, and
-who was an old mariner with a white beard, did devoutly believe
-in all the extravagancies which I have just mentioned, as well as
-in the fantastic tale which he told. I give it in rather better
-language than the narrator made use of; his speech, indeed, being
-much seasoned with forecastle expressions, not of the most delicate
-nature. But it is worthy of a new chapter.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXVI.
-
-THE LEGEND OF THE DEMON WHO HAUNTS POINT MORANT IN JAMAICA.
-
-
-Old Josiah Ward, for such was the name of my storyteller, recounted
-the legend to about a dozen of us, as we sat in the lee of the
-long-boat on the deck, the breeze blowing gently, and the ‘Saucy
-Susan’ running slowly before it. Thus he spoke—
-
-‘Just one score of years after the great Christopher Columbus
-discovered the New World, there sailed westward, across the Atlantic,
-a ship, or rather galley, of strange make and fashion. She was very
-long, shipmates, and floated low and deep in the water, but her prow,
-all carved and fantastically wrought, rose up above her deck curved
-like the neck of a swan, and ending in a great eagle’s beak. This
-head and beak were of iron. At the top of both her masts, for there
-were two, this galley carried broad, swallow-tailed pendants, quite
-black, except that there were in the centre of each an eagle’s head
-and beak of red colour, just like the head and beak at the prow. The
-galley sailed marvellously fast, and the wind that bore her was ever
-fair. Yes, shipmates, weeks and weeks rolled on, and not a mariner on
-board her had need to start sheet, or tack,—and yet tempests swept
-across her path, and the crew of the galley saw Spanish caravals
-founder in the great waves, not a bow-shot from their ship, while
-they were speeding over water ruffled only by a gentle breeze. And
-the reason was, shipmates, that an enchanted wind filled the galley’s
-sails, and before its breath the natural storms of the air could not
-prevail. There was always, as it were, a spot of fair wind upon the
-ocean, running rapidly westward, and in the centre of that spot, the
-galley swept across the waves, going with sails and oars.
-
-‘The sailors who manned this strange bark were men of very fair
-complexion, of light blue eyes and long flaxen hair, and the
-language they spoke was the tongue of that far northern land—whence,
-in the old days, came forth, each in his war-galley, the fierce
-sea-kings—the Buccaneers of the North—shipmates, to plunder and
-to spoil. These men were heathens and unbelievers—they worshipped
-gods, called Odin and Thor, and each had a magic sword, the steel
-of which was wrought by little demons who live under ground, and
-in hollow places, which they scoop in great rocks and stones, and
-where they forge such blades that no weapon, were it even welded by
-the cunning makers of Damascus, could prevail against them. But the
-strangest thing of all, comrades, was that the captain of this ship
-was a woman—a woman of great stature, and fierce and lofty aspect.
-Her name was Tronda, and she was a sorceress; she could make the
-winds blow as she listed, and she had a crystal into which those
-who looked could see the future. This Tronda, mates, was a witch of
-great power, and she came from one of the northern islands, near that
-huge whirlpool called Lofoden, which can suck great navies down into
-the abysses of the sea. She wore a sea-green coloured tunic, with a
-necklace of beads made of a pebble called adder-stone, which hath
-strange virtues, and her head-gear was formed of the fur of the wild
-cat. Likewise she wore a very broad girdle, on which were embroidered
-strange words and letters in gold, and to it was attached a pouch,
-in which she kept the charms and spells with which she conjured.
-But her great power was over the elements, shipmates, for Tronda
-was a witch of Lapland—that dreary coast of snow which mariners
-skirt, sailing into the White Sea—and her name was known as a potent
-trafficker in such powers as ordinary mortals possess not, and many
-shipmen came to her and spoke her fair, and gave her money, and she
-sold them fair winds to waft them on their course. But I have heard,
-shipmates, that such was the nature of these unnatural breezes, that
-they wrecked every seventh ship which sailed before them. Six would
-go prosperously to their port, but the wind which the seventh had
-purchased, would gradually swell and wax great and mighty, until it
-became a hurricane, which tore sail and mast before it, and beat the
-ill-fated ship down into the sea.
-
-‘It was by certain rhymes, comrades, that Tronda and the other
-Lapland witches ruled the air, and made the storm-clouds fly as they
-wished. I have heard that she would stand high on a rock, or upon the
-poop of a ship, when the sea was calm below, and the summer air clear
-above. Then would she toss her arms above her head, and kneeling
-down, with her fair hair streaming over her shoulders, sing the magic
-song, which brought forth clouds upon the heavens, and unchained the
-wind, to rush over the howling sea. No one understood this song, but
-its name was _Vard lokur_—and it was in an ancient northern tongue
-called Lap, many words of which have power over the swart demons, and
-dwarfs, and elvish workers in metals, who live under the mountains of
-Finland and Jutland.
-
-‘Now, Tronda was a miser, and loved gold, and when mariners came to
-her and told her legends about a new world lying to the west, far
-across the ocean, and where the yellow metal and stones still more
-precious glistened and shone, on every mountain and on every beach,
-she said—“I, too, will depart and see that golden land, where there
-is neither frost nor cold, but diamonds bright as icicles, and pearls
-as white as snow.” Then she embarked in her galley, and raised a
-magic wind, which bore her across the Atlantic, and at sunrise one
-bright morning, she saw before her the land of the New World. But the
-galley had not coasted far, when two caravals came forth and gave her
-chase. The Spaniards knew little with whom they had to deal; Tronda
-stood on the poop of her ship, and stretched her arms forth, singing
-her magic rhymes in Lap, and straightway a squall came rushing down
-from the land, and before the Spaniards could lower their sails, it
-broke upon the caravals, and ships and crews sunk together in the sea.
-
-‘So, the fame of Tronda, the Lapland witch, that could sell winds,
-was noised abroad all over the Indies. She never went ashore—but in
-her galley, with the eagle’s beak, she cruised among the islands and
-along the main. The Spanish captains often went aboard the galley,
-and humbled themselves before the witch, and bought winds to carry
-them from isle to isle, and port to port, each wind being purchased
-with a lump of gold. When the Inquisition, which was established in
-Cuba, heard of this strange trafficking, they sent caravals of war
-to capture the sorceress, but her powers baffled all their skill.
-Sometimes, she stilled the air, so that all the ships lay motionless
-together. Then, just as the Spaniards would get out their boats to
-row to the Norse galley, a gentle breeze would fan her sails, and
-she would glide deftly away, while Tronda, who took a pleasure in
-tormenting her pursuers, would stand upon the poop, worshipping her
-strange gods, and singing her unlawful incantations. At other times,
-she would raise mists, in the midst of which the Spaniards would
-grope for days, firing guns, and ringing bells—so that, at last,
-the ships of war gave up the chase, and returned to the Havannah.
-But no one who sought Tronda to buy a wind, had ever any difficulty
-in boarding her galley. She received all such with fair words and
-courteous bearing, and gave them, in return for their gold, each a
-large stoup, or jar, the mouth of it sealed with wax, bearing strange
-figures and signs. This jar each captain took with him, and directly
-the anchor was lifted, Tronda would instruct him to break the seal,
-when immediately the fair breeze would fill the sails, and the ship
-would move gaily on her way. So, by this traffic, Tronda amassed vast
-riches, and every week the galley sunk lower and deeper in the water,
-with its increasing freight of precious stones and gold. But it was
-not alone fair and gentle breezes which the Lapland witch trafficked
-in. She sold adverse winds and awful storms to the enemies of
-luckless mariners. She sold calms, too, which haunted a hapless ship,
-chaining her, as it were, to the unruffled sea, until, drop by drop,
-the fresh water was drunk out, and the sailors died on the deck, or
-cast themselves overboard in their raving delirium of thirst. And so
-many a customer came to Tronda to buy prosperous winds for friends,
-and wrecking tempests for enemies. The smug merchant purchased a fair
-wind for himself, and a baffling breeze for his rival in the trade.
-The love-lorn maiden bought a prosperous gale for her sweetheart’s
-ship, and the jealous dame paid gold for a tempest to wreck the bark
-of a faithless lover.
-
-‘Now, comrades, years moved slowly on, and the Norse galley was
-so deep in the water with gold and precious stones, that, had it
-not been for enchantment, she would have sunk outright. Then the
-blue-eyed and long-haired mariners entreated Tronda that she would
-allow them to look again upon the mountains and the Fiords of Norway,
-and that she would raise a westerly breeze to carry them home across
-the ocean. But the witch scoffed at their requests, giving them
-foul words, and saying that she must have more gold. The chief of
-the crew was a young man called Torquil, and he it was who sighed
-most for home, because he had left a maiden there whom he loved,
-and from whom he had been long parted. Therefore, after Tronda had
-retired to the great cabin, where she lived alone, Torquil entered
-it unbidden. It was quite dark, for the cabin was beneath the water,
-and no light came down to it from the deck, but an ancient lamp of
-bronze swung slowly from the beams overhead, and in this lamp burnt a
-flame, although there was neither wick nor oil to feed it. The witch
-was sitting in a great chair like a throne, and before her were
-open boxes crammed with lumps of gold, which gleamed in the flicker
-of the bronze lamp. On the table lay the magic crystal in which the
-sorceress could see the future; and upon the high back of the antique
-chair, in which she sat, perched two ravens, grey with age, both of
-which uttered a low, hoarse croak as Torquil entered.
-
-‘“Mother,” he said, for all who spoke to the witch so addressed
-her—“mother, I would go home to my own country; I long again to see
-the face of my father and of my betrothed. Therefore, I bid you raise
-a favouring westerly gale; for, if you do not, neither I nor one of
-my comrades will put hand to rope on board this galley again.”
-
-‘With that the witch rose slowly to her feet. ‘Look you, Torquil
-Randa,’ quoth she, ‘whoso in this galley disobeys my orders, the
-elements, which are at my beck and bidding, shall overwhelm him.’
-
-‘But Torquil stood erect, nothing daunted. “I know your powers,
-mother,” he answered; “but as well be sunk in the sea as wander for
-ever upon its surface, homeless and friendless. You heard what I have
-spoken; I will not live longer away from kindred and home.”
-
-‘And so saying, the bold mutineer left the cabin. Tronda followed
-him on deck, muttering her Lapland rhymes, and waving her arms aloft
-in the air. As she did so, great banks of black clouds began to
-rise from out the ocean, and the sea-birds flew round the masts of
-the galley, screaming with affright. There was a dead calm in the
-air, and it grew so hot that the mariners gasped for breath. The
-bright tropic day, shipmates, seemed to be changing into night, and
-the clouds got lower and lower until they appeared to rest upon the
-topmasts of the galley. All this time the witch was kneeling upon the
-poop, chanting her accursed rhymes, and Torquil was standing alone
-beside the mainmast, for his comrades were terrified, and slunk away
-from him as from a man under a curse.
-
-‘Suddenly the witch stopped, and shaded back from her eyes her long
-flowing hair, gazing intently at the sky. In the next moment, a flash
-of lightning—so bright that every one on board the galley, except the
-sorceress, was dazzled and blinded by the glare—tore out of the dark
-heavens; struck the main topmast of the galley; and with a crash,
-like that of all the artillery in the world fired off in one salvo,
-passed gleaming down the wood, shaking the ship as though she had
-been lifted a hundred feet, and then allowed to fall splash into
-the sea. The explosion was followed by a thick sulphurous smoke,
-which seemed to come steaming up out of the inmost recesses of the
-galley, and while the crew, blinded and almost choking in the yellow
-sulphurous fume, were groping about the deck, they heard the loud
-screaming laughter of the witch, followed by the croak of the ravens
-from the cabin.
-
-‘At length the smoke or mist gradually cleared away, and as it did
-so, and the men recovered their eyesight, they saw Tronda standing as
-usual on the poop, with her old aspect of haughty command. Her first
-words, comrades, were—
-
-‘“Fling that carrion into the sea, and take warning by the fate of
-Torquil Randa how you dispute the will of such as I.”
-
-‘So the sailors advanced, all trembling, to the foot of the mainmast,
-where lay the body of the man of whom the witch spoke. He had been
-struck by the lightning, comrades, but there was neither scaith nor
-scar upon his flesh, only on the forehead a small round blue spot. So
-the mariners lifted up the body, and while it was yet warm plunged it
-over the side. It sunk feet first, and as the head disappeared, the
-crew thought that the dead face frowned.
-
-‘That night Tronda sat alone in her cabin, beneath the bronze lamp,
-as she had done when her victim entered. The crystal lay upon the
-table as before. All at once, the flame of the lamp flashed high up,
-and then sank down into the bronze, so that the cabin was almost in
-darkness, and the two ravens fluttered and croaked. Tronda lifted up
-her head, and her livid face became as the face of a statue carved
-out of blue and grey marble, for before her, standing as he had
-already done that day, was the form of Torquil Randa, with the blue
-spot upon his forehead where the lightning had struck it.
-
-‘There was silence for the space of a minute, and then the form of
-Torquil spoke.
-
-‘“I am sent from the dead,” it said, “to give you a last warning.”
-
-‘“Return to those who sent you,” answered the witch; “I take no
-warnings.”
-
-‘“I am bid to tell you,” said the spirit, “that the measure of your
-iniquities is nearly full.”
-
-‘The witch of Lapland rose erect, and stood confronting the
-apparition.
-
-‘“I have no fear of aught, either dead or living, spirit or flesh,”
-she replied. “Get you gone, or I will call up the spectres of the
-winds, who will chase you to the uttermost ends of the earth.”
-
-‘The figure of Torquil Randa gave a sad smile, and stretching forth
-its hand, touched the magic crystal, which immediately crumbled into
-black dust. “The powers which are given to me,” said the spirit, “are
-greater than yours.”
-
-‘Tronda’s frame shivered as she saw this, but she lost no whit of
-countenance, and looked her terrible visitant steadily in the face.
-
-‘“There will be given you one last opportunity,” the apparition said.
-“Will you repent?”
-
-‘“No!” said the witch of Lapland.
-
-‘The figure of Torquil Randa grew less and less distinct, and as
-it disappeared, the flame of the lamp brightened up again, and the
-ravens, which had nestled at Tronda’s feet, flew back to their
-perches on her chair.
-
-‘The next day, the galley meanwhile lying not far from Cape Tiberoon,
-in Hispaniola, there came on board, in a small canoe, a Spanish girl,
-who seemed, shipmates, to have hardly life in her to climb up the
-low side of the galley. This girl was of a beauty rarely seen upon
-the earth, but those who looked upon the bright red spot in her white
-cheek, and the sickly flash of her black floating eyes, knew that
-there was hardly a month’s life flickering in her bosom; so she went
-slowly into the cabin, and fell upon her knees before the witch.
-
-‘“Mother,” she said, “I am dying fast, as you can see. I have
-a lover, my betrothed. He is coming across the ocean to bid me
-farewell. Oh, that I might live to see him! I have little gold, but
-for what I have, grant him a fair breeze, that his ship may come to
-land before I die, and that I may give up my spirit in his arms.”
-
-‘So saying, the Spanish girl held forth a piece of gold the size of
-a walnut. Tronda had opened her mouth to speak, when a third woman
-entered the cabin. She was a tall and haughty dame, and as she
-observed the dying girl, a smile like that of a fiend passed over
-her face. Her cheeks flushed, and her eyes glanced with the fire of
-deadly spite. The younger girl started back at her aspect, and then
-sunk all trembling and sobbing upon the floor.
-
-‘Then the elder spoke thus—
-
-‘“I hate that woman. She is my rival. She has won from me the man
-I love. I would prevent their meeting. She is poor, but I am rich.
-This, for a wind which will keep back his ship, until she be no more.”
-
-‘With that, shipmates, the woman laid upon the table a lump of virgin
-ore, as big as a cocoa-nut. The other girl said nothing, but still
-held out her smaller offering. Tronda stood between them musing.
-At last, she took the large lump, and dropped it into the great
-chestfull at her feet.
-
-‘“You shall have a baffling wind,” she said to the jealous rival. The
-poor girl, who was dying, rose feebly, and passed out weeping; the
-crew let her down with careful hands into her canoe.
-
-‘But at the moment when Tronda had made her decision, the sudden moan
-of a hollow sounding wind passed through the air, and the galley
-rocked and laboured, as though an invisible hand had smote her. The
-witch remained long musing in the cabin, until, hearing the dash
-of oars, she rose and went on deck. The galley was deserted, the
-whole crew, embarked in the boats, were pulling fast for the land,
-while the horizon was again clouded as it had been when the witch
-drew lightning from the heavens. Tronda mounted upon the poop, and
-stretched forth her arms, to curse the faithless crew, when her eye
-suddenly fell upon Torquil, standing as he had stood, beneath the
-mainmast, when the levin bolt struck him. Then she forbore, and
-remained with drooping head, gazing into the sea below. But what was
-remarkable, was, that when the whole crew of the galley left her at
-once, instead of rising, she sunk still deeper in the water; and as
-a heavy swell began to lift and heave around, the ship rolled and
-pitched with a strange sickly motion.
-
-‘Then came another portent. Tronda still stood upon the poop, when
-she started to hear a sudden pattering of feet, and a squeaking and
-scratching all around her. Immediately there poured forth from every
-hatchway a whole legion of rats—young ones and old—brown and grey—all
-of them making for the side of the vessel, and then plunging with a
-loud shrill squeaking into the sea, which was speedily dotted with
-their little heads, all swimming merrily to land. When the last had
-leaped overboard, the figure of Torquil Randa glided softly aft and
-confronted the witch.
-
-‘“Rats,” quoth the figure, “leave a sinking ship.” And, as he spoke,
-the galley appeared to float in the water more heavily and deeply
-than ever, while the swells rose in great rocking billows, and the
-moan of a coming wind hurtled over the sea. Still Tronda confronted
-the apparition with a lip which never quivered, and an eye which
-never blinked.
-
-“My ancestors,” said she, “were champions and heroes; one of
-them—Eric Westra—descended into the tomb of Sigismund, the sea king,
-and bore from thence the bronze sepulchral lamp which burns beneath,
-although it was guarded by monsters and potent spells. What art thou,
-then, that one in whose veins runs the blood of such a hero, should
-tremble and quake before thee?”
-
-‘But the apparition said—
-
-‘“I come from a power which is mightier than that of Odin and of
-Thor, and I am commissioned to pronounce to thee the doom thou shalt
-undergo as a punishment for thy wicked sorceries, even until the end
-of time.”
-
-‘At that there rose a mighty wind, and the galley started away before
-it. In vain Tronda bade the elements to cease their strife—in vain
-she knelt upon the poop, and, with her drenched hair all streaming in
-the tempest, sung her magic rhymes and screamed out her most potent
-charms. The winds blew, and the clouds lowered, and the waves rose,
-unheedful of her spells, and so at last she started up from the deck,
-and cried in a lamentable voice—
-
-‘“Alas! alas! my power is gone from me, and the elements obey me no
-more!”
-
-‘At these words there was a flutter and a croak, and the ravens,
-flying from the cabin, soared up into the tempest-tossed air,
-wheeling round and round the rocking masts of the labouring ship.
-
-‘“And you too,” said Tronda, looking up at them, “leave me!”
-
-‘The sentence, comrades, was no sooner spoken than the foul birds
-darted off, each his separate way, and were speedily lost in the
-darkness. Then the storm burst out with all its fury. Had it been a
-bark manned by mortals, the galley would not have lived an hour in
-that sea; but enchantment kept it afloat until it had finished its
-destined course. For some space the Lapland witch and the figure of
-Torquil Randa were the only forms visible in the ship. But as the
-night fell, and the darkness grew intense, pale flashes of lightning
-showed troops of phantoms upon the deck, who worked the ropes and
-sails as mariners in a gale. These shapes, comrades, were the spirits
-of the seamen whom Tronda by her incantations had drowned. But still
-the witch stood erect and fearless through all this tumult of horror,
-lifting up her unabashed forehead to the gale, and flashing all
-around her wild grey eyes. The figure of Torquil stayed ever by her
-side.
-
-‘At length, comrades, in the thick of the roaring tornado, with all
-the gibbering ghosts dimly seen flitting on the deck amid the flying
-spray and foam, there was shouted from the prows, in a voice which
-boomed like the tones of a church bell, “Land.”
-
-‘At this the spectre of the Norse mariner turned to Tronda, and said—
-
-‘“Now hear your doom. From this time forth you will haunt the cape on
-which we are driving; and there you will have power over the winds
-which blow. Your evil nature, which is as a mighty devil within you,
-will ever impel you to retard rather than to advance the course of
-mariners; but yet, for every moment of time a ship is hindered on her
-course, will you pass a year of torment, such as it is not in the
-breast of man to conceive. And this shall last even to the day when
-the sea shall give up its dead.”
-
-‘In a moment after, mates, the galley was crushed into splinters, and
-not a vestige of her, or of her precious cargo of pearls, and jewels,
-and gold, were ever seen by man. But Tronda, the evil spirit of Cape
-Morant, still haunts that desolate beach and these stormy breakers,
-and sometimes in wild mid-watches, the mariner has caught a glimpse
-of her pale face and stony eyes, and floating locks, driving through
-the scud of the storm, with her arms tossed above her head, as though
-she were still singing the chaunt which raised wind and waves. I
-never spoke, comrades, with those who saw her; but I have heard tell
-of a sailor of Sir Francis Drake, who being, in a night of storm,
-clinging to the end of the bowsprit furling a split sail, beheld the
-ancient face of the hag, with her grey, fishy eyes, looking into his
-own, and who came near letting go hold of the spar in his fright,
-and tumbling into the boiling sea below. But he managed to make his
-way, all pale and shaking, on board the ship, where he told what he
-had witnessed; and certain old men of the crew said it was a most
-evil omen, and that either the ship would be lost, or he who saw
-the appearance would be drowned. Now, word being passed through the
-ship of what had happened, it came to the ears of the stout-hearted
-admiral himself; and presently Sir Francis appeared out of the main
-cabin.
-
-‘“What is this I hear, men,” says he, “that one of you has been
-frightened by a demon?”
-
-‘“It was the devil, Sir Francis!” said the sailor, by name James
-Gilbert.
-
-‘“And what if it were?” quoth the admiral. “He is but a coward. If he
-shows his face to you again, pluck the grisly fiend by the beard. The
-devil fears all who do not fear him.”
-
-‘But for all these bold words of the admiral, the old sailors were
-right. Before the ship had made Porto Bello, whither she was bound,
-Gilbert was flung from the lee foretop-sail yard-arm into the sea.
-After the first plunge, he never came to the surface, and the old
-sailors knew that what had happened was in consequence of his having
-seen the demon who haunts Point Morant.’
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXVII.
-
-WHAT HAPPENS ABOARD THE ‘SAUCY SUSAN’—AND THE ENDING OF HER AND HER
-CREW.
-
-
-Three days after we boarded the ‘Saucy Susan’ I was the look-out man
-during a dark mid-watch. The wind was fresh, the sea high, and we
-were plunging rapidly along; the sails straining and surging, and
-the masts and rigging cracking with the pressure. I was standing on
-the heel of the bowsprit, with my arm round the forestay to balance
-myself, and occasionally ducking and stooping as I best could to
-avoid the cold showers of brine which our sharp bows tore up, when
-some one pulled my doublet, and, looking round, I saw Rumbold.
-
-‘Is there any one about?’ quoth he; ‘I want to speak to you
-privately.’ But the breeze, although it blew strong, was steady, and
-the watch lay dozing under the lee of the long-boat between the masts.
-
-‘My mind misgives me,’ says Rumbold, presently, ‘that they have a
-design on me. That fellow Nixon watches every motion as a cat does a
-mouse. I know that Jerry, Le Chiffon Rouge, and he, are aware that
-I have pearls about me, and I go in constant dread. Did you see the
-three rogues to-day, how long and how earnestly they talked, and what
-sly glances they, every one of them, threw at me? It was ticklish
-work living among the Spaniards at the Rio de la Hacha, but I warrant
-you I feel never a bit more comfortable among my countrymen here.’
-
-I inquired where Jerry, the Captain, and Nixon were?
-
-Rumbold replied, that they were all three drinking in the great
-cabin, and that being pretty far gone, he had been able to slip out
-to seek me.
-
-‘Now,’ quoth he, ‘I don’t intend that these rascals shall have my
-pearls, if I can keep them—and what is more, I don’t intend that they
-shall have them, even although I may not be able to keep them—they
-shall go into the sea, which they came out of, first.’
-
-I said, that surely the fellows would not murder him for his wealth.
-
-‘Well,’ he answered, ‘they would not murder, if they could steal
-without it—but if they can’t, I do not suppose that a throat or so
-cut, would make much difference.’
-
-Upon this I replied, heartily shaking Rumbold’s hand at the same
-time,—
-
-‘You helped me, at my time of need, among the Spaniards. Perhaps, I
-can help you now—will you entrust the pearls to me?’
-
-‘My good fellow,’ says Rumbold, with great eagerness, ‘that is
-precisely the favour I came to ask of you.’
-
-And with that, he fumbled in his bosom, and presently drew out a
-sort of flat pouch, made of thin but tough leather, with straps
-which buckled round the body. We both looked eagerly to see that
-we were not observed, but not a soul could be seen stirring upon
-deck. A lantern, swinging from the weather-foreshrouds, cast a dusky
-gleam around upon the dripping bulwarks, and the wet and slippery
-planks—but we were alone.
-
-‘Hush!’ says he, softly. ‘The pearls are in this pouch—there is a
-good thousand pounds worth—strap the belt tightly round you, under
-your clothes, the first time you have an opportunity. If you deliver
-it up to me safely at Jamaica, a third of the profits shall be
-yours—if anything happens to me, I make you my legatee—keep pouch and
-pearls, and make the best of them.’
-
-He had hardly made the transfer, when a shadow glided darkly between
-us and the lantern. We both rushed aft as far as the foremast, and
-pried eagerly about, but not a creature was to be seen.
-
-‘Bah!’ said Rumbold, ‘it was only the light, swinging with the
-ship as she rolls.’ But my own belief was that some one had glided
-across the deck, and mounted the weather-forerigging. I had not
-time, however, to communicate my thoughts to Rumbold, when we heard
-loud voices, and saw a glimmering of lights aft, and immediately
-Jerry came forwards, walking not very steadily, although he had good
-sea-legs, and clinging to the rigging, when the ship made a wilder
-lurch than ordinary.
-
-‘Farewell—take care!’ exclaimed Rumbold. ‘I must not be seen here.’
-
-So saying, he slid over to leeward, and crept aft, under the black
-shadow of the sails. Meantime, Jerry approached, and taking the
-lantern from the forerigging, grasped my shoulder, and asked me—in
-a thick voice and with a hiccup—whether all was well? I replied
-in the affirmative: upon which he steadied himself on the deck as
-well as he could, and began to hum over a song to himself—sometimes
-stopping to put the same question to me, half a dozen times over,
-after the manner of a drunken man—when, all at once, the ship giving
-a violent lee-lurch, he was pitched bodily against the bulwarks,
-and at the same moment a heavy marline spike fell with a crash from
-the rigging, tearing up white splinters in the deck. Had it not been
-for that lucky lurch, that sharp and ponderous iron would have cleft
-the mate’s head. All this happened in a moment, but the weapon had
-hardly struck the deck, when Jerry bounded to his legs, and with a
-tremendous oath, that there was treachery somewhere, called to me to
-go aloft in the weather-rigging, while he took the lee. The danger he
-had escaped seemed to have sobered the mate at once. I sprung into
-the tightened shrouds, half bewildered at the thing, while Jerry
-screamed to me, from the opposite rigging, to look sharp and take
-care of a knife-thrust, for he was certain it was that villainous
-Portuguese dog who had flung the marline spike.
-
-Up we both went into the rocking rigging. We climbed over the rail of
-the foretop at the same moment, and I saw that Jerry held the barrel
-of a small pistol between his teeth.
-
-‘The murthering rogue!’ he cried. ‘But he has made his last
-cast—either he or I go down on that deck a dead man!’
-
-We both looked up to the heel of the top-gallant mast. The white
-canvas was tugging and straining upon the bending yard, and the loose
-lee-rigging was rattling against the mast and sail.
-
-‘There he is—there’s the thief!’ Jerry roared, and we both sprang
-into the topmast rigging. Holding on by the top-gallant yard, I
-discerned a black figure, like a shadow, against the light-coloured
-canvas. All at once I saw its arm move, something bright gleamed
-through the air, and Jerry shouted—
-
-‘Devil confound him—he has sent his knife into my shoulder,’ and
-immediately stopped, grasping the shrouds as though he feared to
-fall. Knowing now that the Portuguese had no knife, I sprang rapidly
-up the shrouds to grapple with him. Just then, a faint watery glimpse
-of moonlight fell upon the ship, throwing a great shadow upon the
-broad sails on the mainmast, and I saw above me, crouched upon the
-yard, the form of Vasco—his grim face gazing at me, and his hands
-clenched, as though he was determined to sell his life as dearly as
-he could. The next moment, we had grappled together—neither of us
-spoke—but the Portuguese attempted to seize my throat with his teeth;
-I caught him however by his hair, and wrenched his head backwards,
-while I sought to gripe his right wrist and so overpower him. But the
-creature, although he had no strength to cope with me, was as lithe
-and slippery as an eel, and suddenly striking me a blow between the
-eyes, which made abundance of lights dance before them—I felt in a
-moment his cold long fingers twining round my throat, and closing
-upon my windpipe. In the instinctive struggle for breath, I let go
-hold of his hair, and at the same instant, a sudden and tremendous
-swing through the air, as the ship rolled violently below, made me
-clutch the ropes about me, or I should have been flung off into the
-sea, like a stone from a sling. At that moment the grasp upon my
-throat relaxed,—and with a litheness and agility, which were like
-the qualities of a monkey and a snake united in one creature—the
-Portuguese slid, as it were, from me, upon the main-royal stay,
-crawling and worming himself along towards the other mast. But Jerry,
-who had by this time recovered the first faintness from his cut,
-kept his eye steadily upon the rogue, for I calling out that he was
-escaping to the mainmast, the mate replied—‘Ay, ay, I see him:’ and,
-then, steadily taking aim, the explosion of the pistol re-echoed
-loudly, from sail to sail, and the Portuguese suddenly dropping his
-legs from the stay, hung to it by his hands only.
-
-‘Stand from under,’ shouted Jerry, ‘and allow the villain to drop
-clear. He has stabbed me as he did Shambling Ned.’
-
-Vasco uttered no sound, but he raised his legs again, seeking by a
-mighty effort to recover his position upon the rope. His feet had,
-indeed, touched it, when the muscles relaxed again, and he hung as
-before by his hands, swinging dreadfully with the motion of the
-ship. All this time, Jerry was clutching the forerigging, not having
-moved since the knife of the Portuguese struck him. The watch upon
-deck having been aroused by Jerry’s cries, and the report of the
-pistol, were running to-and-fro with lanterns, and some of them were
-ascending the rigging towards us, when Jerry roared out again—
-
-‘Stop—stop, every mother’s son of you, where you are till the fellow
-falls, and then stand by to pitch him overboard.’
-
-The Portuguese heard this, for he turned round his head to Jerry, and
-I saw his white teeth, as the wretch grinned in his agony. The mate
-answered this look with a loud laugh.
-
-‘Some of you there below,’ he cried, ‘go into the great cabin, bring
-up a flagon of wine—and we’ll drink to the murthering dog’s speedy
-arrival in hell.’
-
-The Portuguese now let go hold of the rope with his right hand—and
-then, as if to reserve his strength, hung for awhile with the left. I
-did not think that the man would have had such endurance in him, but
-he was of a light weight, and the muscles of his arms were strong.
-
-All this time he never uttered a sound. Jerry, too, held his peace,
-and the crew below waited in silence, with their lanterns glimmering
-on deck. There was something very solemn in all this—the struggling
-and tossing ship—the rigid figures of the seamen—the silence, except
-for the wind and waves, and the writhing creature waving in the air.
-
-At length, he uttered one loud shrill cry of mortal agony, which
-echoed again and again between the sails, and immediately afterwards
-dropped like a stone. I heard the heavy thump with which he crashed
-down upon the deck. Descending as quickly as I could, I found that
-Jerry, in spite of his wound, which was, however, only a flesh cut,
-was standing over the Portuguese, who lay all doubled up where he
-fell.
-
-‘Up with the hound, and over the side with him to the sharks!’ said
-Jerry, in a low stern voice. Immediately the poor wretch was plucked
-from the deck, and four sturdy fellows bore him to the bulwarks. He
-gave no sign of life; but just as they heaved him up for the fatal
-swing, the lanterns being all gleaming around, I saw him, his eyes
-still shut, make the sign of the cross upon his forehead. He was,
-therefore, still alive.
-
-‘One!’ cried Jerry.
-
-The four executioners, who seemed to like the job well, gave the
-wretch a swing.
-
-‘Two, three!’ thundered the mate, and at the last word, Vasco of
-Lisbon was hove a fathom from the ship’s side, into the boiling sea.
-As he plunged down into the brine, every one heard for a moment,
-and no more, such a cry as he uttered just before he fell from the
-rigging. Then his voice was choked for ever.
-
-I could hardly deny but that the Portuguese merited his fate; but
-the flinging overboard of a living man, without form of trial or
-condemnation, seemed a hasty and cruel deed. Nevertheless, none of
-the crew, except myself, appeared to be of that opinion, and most of
-them said openly, that it was a very good riddance, and that whether
-he had attempted the life of the mate or not, he was better in the
-sea than the ship. As for Jerry, he had his wound, which was, as
-I have said, a flesh cut on the shoulder, rubbed with brandy, and
-seemed to think no more about the matter.
-
-When my watch was up, I went below in no merry mood; and, presently,
-found an opportunity, while lying in my hammock, which swung among
-near twoscore of similar sleeping places, to dispose of the pearls
-as Rumbold had recommended. The grey light of the morning was coming
-down the hatchway, and I had not yet slept, for the end of the
-wretched Portuguese was still in my head, when there was suddenly a
-great thumping over head on deck, and an outcry for all hands to turn
-out and go to quarters. It is curious to observe, at this summons the
-sudden rousing of all the sleepers in the ship—how in a moment, grim
-heads start out of the warm blankets, and a whole legion of stalwart
-naked legs come down together, from a score of swinging hammocks
-upon the deck. But a sailor is soon dressed; and, accordingly, two
-minutes had not gone by since I lay in my hammock, when I was at my
-post, staring over the weather bow, at a small sloop, built very low,
-and which seemed to sail very quickly, which was running along with
-us, leaning over before the breeze, so that we could see almost the
-whole of her decks, upon which about half-a-dozen of sailors were
-running with sleepy scared looks, while the steersman was calling
-out and gesticulating violently. Looking forth upon the sea, I saw
-that a mist, almost as thick as that in which we had stumbled upon
-the ‘Saucy Susan,’ was just lifting from the water, and driving
-in vapoury volumes before the wind. It appeared that the mist had
-partially dispersed just before all hands were roused up, and that
-the look-out had directly spied the sloop, close to windward of us.
-If there had been less wind and sea, our small friend would very
-speedily have shown us his stern, for the sharp bows, and rounded
-sides of the vessel were evidently formed for quick sailing; but the
-heavy tumbling ridges of sea hove him so to leeward, that he had no
-chance with a more powerful ship. Meantime, Le Chiffon Rouge mounting
-into the weather-mizen rigging, trumpet in hand, hailed to the sloop
-to surrender; and Jerry, in a breath, roared out to know if the guns
-forward were all ready.
-
-‘She is a barco longo—a Spanish express boat, comrades,’ he shouted;
-‘and we must overhaul her despatches before we part company.’
-
-Still the captain of the sloop made no sign, standing very staunchly
-by the steersman, and conning his ship. Once he motioned to the
-latter to put the helm down, as if he intended suddenly to luff, and
-go round on the other tack; but changing his mind, he glanced at our
-sails, and continued his course. Le Chiffon Rouge again hailed the
-sloop to surrender, but still without effect, and I observed that in
-a temporary lull of the breeze she was beginning to draw away from
-the ship. Then the bull-like voice of Jerry thundered out along the
-deck—‘The first gun ready there—send your cold iron aboard of him!’
-
-Josiah Ward was the captain of the cannon by which I was stationed.
-His old dim eyes flashed up at the notion of a fray; and so,
-stooping over the gun and sheltering the priming from the wind with
-his trembling hand, he glanced warily along the mass of iron as it
-pointed now up to the zenith, now down to the billows, according to
-the motion of the ship, and at length suddenly dashed the burning
-end of a rope, which served for a fusee, into the powder in the pan,
-which flashed up, while the hollow iron belched forth its flame,
-and started back with the explosion, the carriage cracking, and the
-tackles rattling through the blocks, until the discharged cannon lay
-near the centre of the deck, its grimed mouth yet hot and smoking.
-The discharge was a lucky one. The ball tore a hole in the mainsail
-of the sloop, and just then a gust flying heavily over the sea, the
-canvas was rent from top to bottom with a loud harsh shriek, and blew
-fluttering in rags out of the bolt-rope.
-
-‘Back the main topsail,’ cried Jerry. ‘The run is taken out of him.’
-
-But just as the yard swung round, the captain of the sloop made
-but one leap down into his cabin, the sky-light of which was open,
-and directly re-appeared, carrying in his hand a small metal box
-or casket. He had not taken a step upon the deck, when I heard the
-report of a carabine from our ship, and the Spaniard leaped three
-feet into the air, and fell in a heap upon the deck, above his burden.
-
-‘That is the despatch box,’ quoth old Ward. ‘He meant to fling it
-into the sea, but Tommy Nixon was too sharp for him.’
-
-Just then Le Chiffon Rouge hailed in good Spanish that if any one of
-the crew of the sloop dared to meddle with the box, he would hang
-every one of them up to the peak of their own vessel. At that the
-Spanish sailors hastily retired in a body to the bows of the sloop,
-and our stern boat being manned, was lowered dexterously into the
-sea, a man standing at bow and stern to unhook the tackles as she
-touched the water. Nixon had the command of the boat, and pulled
-right aboard the sloop, the crew offering no resistance. The first
-thing he did when he got on deck was to wrench the despatch box from
-the grasp of the Spanish captain, who had been shot through the body,
-and was dying fast. The poor fellow lay in his blood upon the deck,
-coughing from time to time, and sputtering the thick gore from his
-mouth. Meantime, Nixon had two of the Spanish sailors brought aft to
-him, and after examining them, by means of one of his boat’s crew,
-who spoke a little bad Spanish, he hailed that the despatch box was
-all safe, and contained advices from St. Juan, in Porto Rico, to
-Truxillo, under Cape Honduras, and that he would presently search
-the cabin for further information. Meantime another boat had been
-got into the water, and I was ordered to form one of the crew. Jerry
-himself was in the stern-sheets, and presently we all leaped on board
-the Spaniard. The first thing the mate asked for was the despatch
-box. It was a very stout casket of lead and iron, but by means of a
-heavy hammer and a marline-spike, which he brought with him, Jerry
-very soon wrenched open the lid, and we, who were crowding about
-him, soon saw a good packet of letters, and despatches of different
-lengths, tied for the most part carefully with silk, and bearing huge
-seals with manifold devices.
-
-Jerry straightway sat him down upon the deck, and while the rest
-looked anxiously on, began with great coolness to peruse the
-documents one by one. They seemed to be but of little interest, for
-as he read, his brows darkened, and he crumpled up letter after
-letter, and flung them overboard, where they were soon floating, like
-so many white birds between the sloop and the ship. At length he
-opened a paper, sealed with black and red wax, which he had no sooner
-seen than he started up, crying, ‘Ha, this will do, even though there
-be no other!’ And then stuffing the letters he had not read back into
-the box, which he gave me to carry, he asked, in a sudden fierce
-tone, of one of the captured Spaniards, whether there was an axe in
-the ship? The man shrunk back from the question.
-
-‘Why, you fool,’ continued the mate, in broken Spanish, ‘I am not
-going to chop off thy head with it; but I tell thee what, if the axe
-be not forthcoming speedily, I may find means of making thee a head
-shorter without it.’
-
-So the weapon was duly produced.
-
-‘Now, Benjamin Mackett,’ says Jerry, addressing one of the first
-boat’s crew, ‘I heard you boast the other night how speedily you
-could fell a tree in Virginia. Take the axe, and prove thy words on
-the mast of this sloop.’
-
-At this the Spaniards, who guessed by the gestures which passed what
-was to be done, set up very dismal lamentations, and began to conjure
-us, by all the saints, to leave them the means of getting to land.
-
-‘You may get to land,’ replied Jerry, ‘very well under a jury-mast,
-but I intend that you shall be some time about it, or we shall have a
-score of pestilent armadilloes out swarming about our ears.’
-
-In the meantime Mackett, who was a sturdy fellow as might be,
-first applied the axe to the standing rigging, and in a very short
-space the shrouds and stays, cut away from their fastenings at the
-bulwarks, collapsed, as it were, round the mast, which, being thus
-deprived of its supports, began to sway and work with the rolling of
-the ship, creaking and cracking in its step. Then Mackett, flinging
-aside his doublet, laid the broad bright axe to the wood with good
-will. The white chips glanced about the deck, and in a few moments a
-gash was cut so deeply into the mast that I expected to see it snap
-short at every roll.
-
-Now,’ says Mackett, stopping in his work, ‘which side of the sloop
-shall I send the mast over?’
-
-‘Over any side, with a murrain to thee, so thou makest haste,’
-answered Jerry.
-
-Mackett watched the roll of the seas narrowly, and just as the
-sloop lurched heavily, as a great ridge of water heaved up under
-her keel, he struck the finishing blow with such good will that the
-axe sunk a couple of inches into the wood, and with a crack like a
-musket-shot, the mast, with all its appurtenances of rigging and
-fluttering canvas, fell crashing into the sea, smashing to dust the
-light bulwarks of the sloop, and causing it to careen heavily over as
-the jagged and splintered end of the timber continued to rub and rasp
-against the side of the vessel, impelled by the heaving of the swell.
-
-‘And now, Spaniards,’ said Jerry, ‘you may get to Truxillo as
-speedily as you like, and give our compliments to the good folks
-there.’
-
-With that we all got into our boats again; most of the crew jeering
-at and flouting the disconsolate looks of the Spaniards, as they
-stood like men bewildered upon the deck of their crippled ship.
-Before I went over the side, however, I raised the head of the
-Spanish captain; the man was quite dead, and becoming stiff and cold
-already.
-
-Our oars fell into the water, and the boats were speedily hoisted up
-to the davits of the ‘Saucy Susan.’ Then Jerry, going aft, touched
-his hat to Le Chiffon Rouge very ceremoniously, and presented him
-with the casket of despatches and the particular letter which he had
-read, the ship all this time lying to, but gradually drifting to
-leeward of the ‘Barco Longo,’ which now exposed but little surface to
-the wind. After a pretty long communion between these two worthies,
-Le Chiffon Rouge ordered the boatswain to call all hands, and
-presently the whole crew were grouped round the mainmast. Then the
-captain, taking off his hat, began to make one of his usual speeches,
-a part of his duty, in fact, which he appeared fond of, being of a
-long-winded nature, and given to using fine words on such occasions.
-The main points of what he now said were as follows:—
-
-The ‘Saucy Susan,’ as they all knew, was bound on a cruise to the
-Mosquito and Honduras coast, but, happily, they were their own
-masters, and could change their cruising ground as often as they
-thought fit. Well, here were certain despatches newly captured from
-the ‘Barco Longo,’ and as one of them related to a rich Spanish
-ship which was shortly expected in these seas, the captain proposed
-that it be read aloud in English, for the benefit of Messieurs the
-adventurers, that, upon knowing the contents of the paper, they might
-determine as they thought fit.
-
-The crew received this oration with signs of great satisfaction,
-and one or two cried out, ‘Ay, ay, translate the Don’s patter, and
-then we will consider.’ Upon this, Le Chiffon Rouge made a sign to
-Rumbold, who came forward, and placed the important letter in the
-pearl merchant’s hands. Rumbold looked at the manuscript, which was
-written in a fair hand, and then read out very fluently as follows;—
-
- ‘From my House at Ferrol.
- Upon such a date.
-
- ‘Good and trusty Manual—
-
- ‘You having been absent at the mines in Darien, when, in sadness
- and sorrow, I returned to the main land in the long-boat of the
- great galleon, reft of all the treasures which the ship carried,
- by the hands of plundering heretics, who, for our sins, the saints
- permit to infest the Indian seas, I was not able personally to let
- you know the particulars of our misfortune, and indeed I had but
- small time and less heart to write the story. You are aware that in
- a few days after reaching Porto Bello, to which place we scudded
- before the wind, which was boisterous, I found a quick ship sailing
- unto Spain, and having taken passage in her, we were so favoured
- as to avoid all pirates, flibustiers, and buccaneers, and sail
- very prosperously across the Atlantic hither. But as touching the
- Carthagena galleon, that was indeed a heavy loss, and I have made
- it my petition to the king that he will cause representations to be
- sent to their majesties of England and France touching the conduct
- and bearing of their subjects in our Indian seas. The manner of our
- capture was very sudden. Two days sail from Carthagena, we beating
- to windward, a sail was descried an hour before sunset, but which
- vanished before the dusk closed, so that little or nothing more was
- thought of the matter. As is my wont, I retired early to rest, the
- worthy captain of the galleon assuring me that all was well, and a
- very good look-out kept from all parts of the ship. But truly, our
- look-out must have been maintained with but sleepy eyes, for as I
- was dozing, just after having heard midnight chime from the clock
- in the great cabin, and looking half asleep half awake at the lamp
- as it swung to and fro, and made strange glimmerings and shadows
- upon the tapestries, I suddenly heard a tremendous outcry, and the
- running of feet upon the deck above, and then, Manual, a volley of
- musketry, and one of those savage ‘hurrahs’ which are the war-cry
- of the English, followed almost on the instant by a shock which
- made the great galleon tremble and surge from side to side. At that
- moment there came flying down the cabin-stairs our friend Collado,
- of the Hermitage Plantation, his face like unto grey ashes, and
- exclaiming that we were ruined and undone, for that while the watch
- on deck slumbered, being incited thereto by the calmness of the
- weather, a pirate schooner had suddenly laid the galleon on board,
- and that our good captain had fallen in the very volley I had just
- heard discharged.
-
- ‘But even while he was speaking the uproar on deck was renewed.
- I heard the grating and rasping as the sides of the two vessels
- encountered when they rolled, and the fierce outcries and clash
- of steel, and frequent pistol and carbine shots fired while the
- pirates were clambering up our lofty sides and leaping upon
- the deck. They were devils, Manual. No man could resist them.
- They yelled and fought, and seemed to despise their lives; and
- accordingly, in a moment, and ere I could even put on my garments,
- in came the spoilers, rushing down the cabin stairs; a tall and
- strong old man, naked to the waist, and with a handkerchief twisted
- round his grey hair, leading them on, sword and pistol in hand.
- Thus were we constrained to surrender.
-
- ‘Nevertheless, Manual, I must do our spoilers this justice: they
- sought not to harm our persons, and were even (in their way)
- courteous to us their prisoners. This I say specially of the
- leader, who was of lofty and somewhat dignified aspect, and whom
- they called “Captain Jem,” and sometimes “Stout Jem.”’
-
-Here Rumbold made a pause, as if to cough, and glanced slily at me.
-Oh, how my heart leaped as I listened. Honest, noble Captain Jem!
-No prisoners but what would have mercy and courtesy at thy hands!
-Rumbold continued—
-
-‘This old man presently desired to speak with me privately, and,
-quoth he, “There was one of our crew captured by Spaniards at
-Carthagena; tell me truly, is he dead or alive?” At this I bethought
-me that there had been, indeed, an English prisoner examined at the
-alcaide’s; for that strange man, Don José, had informed me of the
-fact, and also that the Englishman behaved very boldly when put to
-his trial; and this I told to the pirate captain, adding, that I
-understood that he had made his escape into the woods, and, although
-he had been seen in the streets of Carthagena at night, and hotly
-pursued, yet that he had given all his followers the slip, and got
-clear off, whither none knew. At this the old man wrung my hand in a
-strange fashion, and whispering me, “I loved that young man as though
-I were his parent,” added, “We make war upon you Spaniards, but we
-are no thieves; therefore let each man of you take his clothes and
-his private stock of money, and descend speedily into the boats. The
-ship and cargo we claim, but not the private goods of passengers and
-crew.”
-
-‘I give thee all these particulars, good Manual, because thou art
-deeply interested in all which befalls me, and so thou wilt not find
-them tedious. And so, presently, with sorrowful hearts we descended
-into our boats, and saw the galleon and the schooner trim their
-course for Jamaica. So far touching our disaster; now to another
-matter.’
-
-‘And the matter which concerns us most, shipmates,’ said Jerry. ‘Go
-on, Mr. Rumbold.’
-
-I give the latter part of the letter with all its details although
-the information involved in it came at last to nothing. Nevertheless,
-I think it right to recount at length the document which caused us
-to change our plans, and indirectly led to the loss of the ship. The
-letter then ran somewhat as follows.—
-
-‘And now, good Manual, our friend and correspondent, Juan Gramada,
-of this town, designing speedily to send forth a goodly ship, bound
-to Truxillo, and laden with wines, cloths, laces, and divers sorts
-of goods proper for the Indian markets, I have advised him that he
-should cause her to pause in her course at a certain barren cluster
-of islets to windward of the Dutch possession of Curaçoa, and
-considerably to the east of the usual cruising places of the pirates,
-who, as I learn, do not often sail to windward of the Gulf of
-Venezuela. These islets are called _Isles des Aves_, or Bird Islets.
-I have landed upon them; they are not inhabited, save by countless
-flocks of sea birds, and they are full of good harbours and creeks,
-where a ship may commodiously ride at anchor. My advice, then, to
-Juan Gramada, and he hath taken it, was to let his ship pause at
-these islands, her captain having been there once before; and that,
-in the mean time, you getting this letter, as I hope you will, about
-a week or a fortnight after the ship sails from Spain, do dispatch an
-agent in whom you can put trust in a good piragua, or small sailing
-sloop, to the Isles des Aves, bearing intelligence as to whether
-the seas westward be pretty clear, so as to make the run across the
-Gulf of Darien as safe as possible. In case of your agent bringing
-unfavourable or doubtful tidings, then the captain of Gramada’s ship
-has instructions to direct the course of the vessel to any other port
-in New Spain, or to the Havannah, as you may think fit, where the
-wares can be disposed of to advantage.’
-
-These were the chief points of the letter, the remainder being
-devoted to private matters not of interest to any of us. But I
-started again when I heard the name of the writer pronounced. It was
-Pedro Davosa.
-
-When Rumbold had ceased reading, Jerry took up the word. ‘Now,
-comrades,’ quoth he, ‘you have heard the news. What say ye, shall
-we continue our course to the south-west, or is there enough in
-that letter to make us haul our wind, and beat up for the Isles des
-Aves? I tell you that a cargo such as the writer mentioneth is worth
-looking for, and it may be that we shall in the mean time light upon
-prey as valuable running down from the islands as we should have met
-upon the coast of the main.’
-
-Upon this, Josiah Ward, being one of the oldest men on board, gave as
-his opinion that we ought to steer eastward for the Isles des Aves,
-keeping not far from the mouth of the Gulf of Venezuela, a bay which
-many Spanish ships were wont to enter and depart from. This seemed
-to settle the matter. The main-topsail was filled, and the direction
-of the ship altered from south-west to south-east, and then, with a
-hearty cheer as an opening to our new cruise, we moved away, leaving
-the Barco Longo, with her overthrown mast, sadly drifting on the sea.
-
-For three days we made good progress on our new course, descrying
-occasionally small sails, but none we thought it worth while to
-pursue. In the meantime Jerry was pleased to take much notice of
-me, and often sounded me as to my relations to Rumbold. I deemed
-it right, however, to give him but evasive replies. At length he
-entreated me one evening to come and crush a bottle in the great
-cabin, where he and certain others of the choicest spirits on board,
-as he said, intended to drink success to the new venture of the Isles
-des Aves. I was in no great humour for such festivities as I knew
-prevailed on board the ‘Saucy Susan,’ but of course I could not but
-signify my acquiescence. So, soon after it was dark that night, and
-having seen that the watch on deck were sober, and that everything
-appeared to be going on well, I repaired to the great cabin, where I
-found the company assembled, and already pretty jovial.
-
-The cabin in question was but a filthy hole, close and stinking,
-with the beams so low that none could stand upright in it, and the
-furniture all broken and hacked in the drunken orgies which often
-took place there. There were arms and coils of rope, and broken
-boxes, and casks half full of provisions and liquors stowed away in
-corners amongst dirty bedding, and heaps of sea clothes flung upon
-them, all wet as their owners had descended from the deck. Upon the
-present occasion the usual rank smell of bilge was overpowered by the
-fumes of tobacco, which all the company smoked, some of them seated
-at a table covered with mugs and glasses, the others where they best
-could, on casks, and boxes, and hammocks, or lying on the floor, upon
-which, for the convenience of those who had no better place, were
-scattered lanterns, that they might see their liquor and light their
-pipes the more readily. When I entered all the company were singing
-lustily a chorus to a tune called ‘Ye Buccaneers of England,’ and
-having at length finished the ditty, I made my way as well as I could
-to Rumbold, and managed to get a seat beside him. The conversation
-then went on, Jerry’s loud voice and sturdy oaths bearing conspicuous
-parts in it.
-
-‘Doctor,’ quoth Le Chiffon Rouge to the surgeon, a lanky young
-man, more than half fuddled, but who was discoursing learnedly to
-his neighbour about the practice of phlebotomy as recommended by
-Galen—‘is it good for Shambling Ned, who came by the cut from Vasco’s
-knife, to drink raw rum.’
-
-‘Shambling Ned,’ quoth the doctor, gravely, ‘hath a skull so thick,
-that neither steel nor spirits can very easily reach the brain, and
-therefore—’
-
-‘Whoso says I have a thick skull,’ retorted the patient, starting up,
-to the great surprise of the doctor, who had imagined him not there,
-‘lies in his teeth, and as a testimony to what I say, I fling this
-into them—’
-
-With these words he dashed a pannikin of raw spirits right into the
-doctor’s face, who started up, gasping and sneezing, and vowing
-vengeance, but was straightway pulled down into his place again by
-those about him, who comforted him by saying that brandy was not to
-be quarrelled with in whatever way a man came by it. Just then the
-highwayman, who had given me the account of his detection in Newgate,
-and who was seated upon a high tub, over which he dangled his legs as
-gracefully as he could, broke in as follows:—
-
-‘Why, stap my vitals! here be a parcel of cullies to call themselves
-gentlemen, forsooth, and brawl in their cups, like so many mumpers of
-Lincoln’s Inn. Take an example by me, bullies, who am the very flower
-of courtesy, having been noted therefor on every heath round London.
-For shame, gentlemen, for shame!’
-
-‘Ho! ho! ho!’ laughed the doctor; ‘here be a footpad teaching us
-politeness, and the rules of the most courtlike society.’
-
-‘Footpad in your teeth, Master Doctor,’ cried the highwayman. ‘I
-scorn the word. A rider, sir; a rider by moonlight, for the benefit
-of my health and my pocket.’
-
-‘I tell you, Harris,’ Jerry here broke in, his roaring voice bearing
-down all before it—‘I tell you, Harris, he lied to you. Curse me! I
-know the roadstead well. I ought to, for I groped in there in as dark
-a night as ever lowered on this side of hell, and boarded a Spanish
-bark that was at anchor, and made all the fellows leap into the sea
-in their shirts. A rare sight, I promise you; like geese flying into
-a mill-pond. Those who could swim got ashore, and those who couldn’t
-were drowned; so that in some sort they were all provided for—ha! ha!
-ha! send the brandy this way. Care killed a cat!’
-
-‘And so you made the dons jump into the salt water in their night
-gear?’ cried an old man, with a villanous looking face above a grey
-beard, and whose name was Cole. ‘It was prettily devised; but not
-such good sport as I have seen in the plantations. Od rot it, man!
-that be the place for your true sportsman. Why, I mind me, about a
-dozen years since, when there comes a cargo of cheat-the-gallows
-birds from over the water in a ship of old Lumper’s, he that hath the
-wharves by Rotherhithe, and behold you, some dozen of stout fellows
-being drinking on board, and getting the latest news of the bona
-robas down by Finsbury Pavement from old mother Black-i’-the-face,
-who came over then for shoplifting in the Poultry,—says Silas Blood,
-him who was killed in the Tortugas by Francy Doubledee, says he:
-“How’s the scurvy aboard this time, captain?” “Scurvy!” quoth the
-captain; “bad enough, I warrant thee. Here has been some dozen rogues
-put aboard, just after the gaol fever—and measly salt pork down among
-the bilge water there, plays the devil with them. Scurvy, say you?
-they are more like lepers than anything else.” “By God! then,” says
-Silas—he was ever a joking man, “they ought to be washed clean. Let’s
-duck the lepers from the yard-arm.” “Well, captain, you know, the
-rogues were not worth a sixpence to anybody; not a planter would buy
-such scabby dogs. So we had them up on deck, and it was the rarest
-sport, man, the rarest, since eggs brought forth chickens, to see the
-ragamuffins all screeching and yelling when they were triced up to
-the tackling and doused alongside, them being just all in a fever,
-as you may say, out of the hot blankets. We got the bona robas out
-of the fore hatch to see the game, and didn’t they shriek out for
-laughing, as the scurvy dogs went lick down into the sea!”
-
-At the conclusion of this delectable tale, the old villain burst
-out a laughing, rubbing his hands, which were shaking as though
-with palsy, and chuckling with his toothless gums. It was relief to
-turn from him to the highwayman, who was recounting stories of his
-exploits.
-
-‘“—But, good Mr. Robber, says she,” so was he continuing, as I caught
-his voice; ‘“but good Mr. Robber,” and she put her pretty face out
-of the coach window, taking from it a dainty vizard all fringed
-with lace of silk and gold, “leave me just one of the lockets, and
-I promise thee that when thou comest to be hanged I will send thee
-so gay a nosegay that all the pretty women from Holborn Hill to the
-Oxford Road shall cry,” “Ay, I warrant you, he hath that from his
-sweetheart!” And so I, shipmates, being the pink of gentlemen riders,
-could not but assent with a low bow, saying, “Madam, here be two
-miniatures, one set in gold, very massive and rich, and the other
-only in very ordinary stuff; I will, out of my admiration for you,
-leave you which you may decide on;” and with that I handed her the
-twain. I wish, comrades, you could have seen her holding a portrait
-of an old gentleman and a young gentleman in each hand: “Here be my
-husband,” quoth she, “very richly set and preciously adorned; and
-here be my lover, with no gold at all around him. Master Highwayman,
-affection is dearer than gold; I give thee my husband, and I keep my
-lover.”’
-
-The highwayman’s story was even more applauded than old Cole’s
-reminiscence of the plantations, and then drinking went on very hard,
-Jerry, in particular, tossing off bumper after bumper of raw brandy,
-and laughing and shouting verses of loose songs, so that he might
-have been heard a league off. All the thorough brute in the man’s
-nature was now becoming apparent. Most of the others were bad enough
-in their liquor, telling such tales as I have given specimens of, but
-Jerry swilled down his draughts of fiery spirits, and, as a dog which
-hath so far derogated from his natural instincts as to get drunk
-might do, merely roared and yelled, and caught at the men who sat
-near him by the doublets, cuffing and shaking them, and shrieking out
-that that was what he loved, and that they would all be drunk! drunk!
-drunk! together! Of those who kept themselves soberest, I remarked
-Tommy Nixon, who, I noticed also, gradually edging his way round to
-Rumbold, who sat almost silent, his acute mind and far-extending
-knowledge disdaining to clothe his thoughts in words, and cast them
-before such swine.
-
-‘Master Rumbold,’ said the worthy Nixon, ‘do you love oysters?’
-
-At that question I saw very well what the man was driving at, and
-watched him narrowly—‘Because,’ he went on, ‘men say there are
-delicious ones on the banks of the Rio de la Hacha! Perhaps you dived
-and picked up a few during your recent voyagings in that half-decked
-piragua, from the dangers of which we were so kind as to rescue thee.’
-
-‘Truly,’ replied Rumbold, ‘if by oysters you mean pearls—’
-
-‘Hush! speak lower,’ said Nixon; ‘thou art a sensible fellow, and
-being a gentleman, knowest that thy passage on board the “Saucy
-Susan” must be paid. As for me, I am not greedy, as all the world can
-testify!’ and here he dropped his voice to a whisper. ‘None but the
-captain, Jerry, and I, know aught. Let me make thy terms; it will be
-the better for us all.’
-
-‘Why, Tommy Nixon,’ said Rumbold, ‘I marvel that a man of thy
-discretion should go forth with a handful of salt to put upon the
-tail of an old sparrow like myself. Why, the pearls are all gone in
-the piragua, and I trust that by this time my agent in Jamaica hath
-them under very advantageous lock and key.’
-
-Rumbold said this with such perfect coolness, and with so frank
-an air of simple candour, that I hastily passed my hand inside my
-doublet to feel if the leathern pouch were really there, or if I had
-dreamed the whole matter. No, there was the precious burden, pressed
-against my bosom. I looked warily at Nixon; he seemed disturbed and
-vexed.
-
-‘’Twere better not trifle, Harry Rumbold,’ he made reply; ‘come, give
-me a ransom, and I shall let you off the rest. I can twirl Jerry
-round my thumb; he is only a strong animal and a good sailor, and
-as for Chiffon Rouge, he is captain but for our own reasons. Pay me
-a ransom, old Harry, and all shall go well with thee; come, only a
-small handful of the seed pearls. Thou hast got them cheap, thou old
-thief, thou knowest thou hast—come.’
-
-‘I tell you,’ answered Rumbold, ‘I have not a pearl in my possession.
-Search me an’ you like. You are too clever, Tommy Nixon, and you
-cheated yourself when you took me aboard. Search me, man, and be
-satisfied.’
-
-Nixon and Rumbold looked stedfastly into each other’s eyes for the
-space of a minute. The former, at length, muttered, as slowly as if
-the words were dragged from him by some other force than that of his
-own will, ‘That thou hast not a pearl in thy possession—that, Harry
-Rumbold, will be seen!’
-
-But just at this moment, a burst of discordant singing, led on by
-the bellowing voice of Jerry, drowned in a moment all the clatter of
-conversation, and the jingling and clashing of pannikin and glass.
-What were the words or what was the air of the song, it would be
-difficult to say, seeing that every man sang according to his own
-peculiar liking; but Jerry’s voice rose above all, hallooing this
-elegant stanza of a ditty common among certain of the Buccaneers—
-
- ‘Haul, cheerily, jades of Jamaica,
- And trulls of Tortugas also,
- The wenches have hold of the tow-rope,
- And across the salt sea we do go—
- Across the salt sea we do go, boys,
- To the Sues and the Prues on the shore,
- Where he hath no wife may find one,
- And he who hath one may have more.’
-
-‘Excellent, upon my reputation!’ shouted the highwayman; ‘Sedley
-could not have made better, nor Tom D’Urfey either. Well did I know
-both.’
-
-‘Sedley! Tom D’Urfey!—who be they?’ roared the drunken mate. ‘That
-song was made of a rare merry night, carousing in a burnt house
-of Maracaibo, when the place was taken under stout l’Olonnais and
-Michael le Basque. Here, more brandy; fill up, comrades. On your
-feet—your feet! He who standeth not, saving only he be dead drunk,
-will I cut down with my hanger. On your feet, I say, and do reason
-to a pledge. Here’s to our next carouse on the Isles des Aves—on the
-wines that come from Ferrol in old Spain. Huzza!’
-
-And the sots upon the floor, staggering to their feet, waved
-lanterns and flagons, and shouted and yelled with drunken voices—‘To
-our next carouse in the Isles des Aves.’
-
-‘Drink—drink, all of you—the liquor is free; it costs nothing,’ Jerry
-continued, staggering as he rose from his seat; ‘drink, I say, or
-I’ll cram an empty bottle down the gullet of every man that’s sober.’
-And, with a drunken hiccup, he seized a lantern, and, waving it round
-his head, flung it to the other end of the cabin.
-
-The revellers shouted a furious chorus of applause.
-
-Meantime, the watch on deck, hearing the tumult, began to flock
-below, when their comrades seized them, and, with maudlin caresses,
-held up to them cups of drink, which they, nothing loath, swallowed
-greedily down. All discipline seemed over and gone, for not a soul
-was left upon the deck to tend the sails, to conn, or to steer.
-
-‘Comrades,’ cried Jerry, articulating with difficulty, ‘I
-propose—that until the morning—the ‘Saucy Susan’—be left—(hiccup)—to
-take care of—herself!’
-
-Another loud chorus of approbation welcomed this proposition, the
-shouting and laughter being followed by the usual outburst of
-discordant singing and swearing.
-
-‘Here be what I like,’ vociferated the old sinner, Cole—‘here be
-true merriment! Keep it up. Pitch him who shirks overboard after the
-Portuguese.’
-
-‘Even so,’ says the highwayman; ‘first to go down to the bottom of
-the sea, and then to go down ever so far below that. The first part
-of the journey cold and wet, egad, but the ending of it hot and dry
-enough.’
-
-‘Here’s a stave, bullies, here’s a stave that they sing in Bridewell
-when the jades beat the hemp that hangs their fancy men. Give it
-mouth, bullies—give it mouth!’ And here the miscreant, who had
-boasted to me of having broken every gaol in England, sang, with a
-mellow voice, for he was not yet quite drunk, having but just come
-from the deck—
-
- ‘Up with your hammers, Bessy and Madge—
- Up with your hammer, Sue;
- Plait their cravats for Joe, Tom, and Jack—
- Cravats they’ll grin grimly through!
- Never hang head, girls, and never look glum,
- Though they strap for it, all the three,
- There’s stout fellows plenty are left in the world,
- In spite of old Tyburn tree!’
-
-I would the reader could see the great cabin with all the drunkards
-in it, as now it appeared. Some sat in sodden solemnity muttering
-to themselves; some rolled, cursing and fighting, on the floor;
-others disputed and drank, trying, as it were, to outscream their
-adversaries. The watch on deck, who had but newly come down, said
-not much, but drank off great goblets of spirits, as if it were a
-race who should be intoxicated first; and so, in good sooth, in a
-very short space of time, the new comers were as madly drunk as
-the original revellers. But in all the insanity of the excitement,
-Jerry kept the lead. His face was all flushed and distorted with the
-liquor, and he champed foam and saliva from his mouth—
-
-‘Here,’ he roared, ‘a health—to the—good fellows—who cry stand and
-deliver—to the Dons. Bumpers, and no heel-taps! Huzza! up yees out!’
-
-And following his example, all the rest drained their glasses, and
-flung them in a volley over their shoulders.
-
-‘More honour—to that toast,’ hiccuped out the brutal man; and,
-suddenly drawing two pistols from his belt, he fired them right and
-left into the air.
-
-‘Huzza!’ shouted the others—‘huzza!’ and in a minute knives were
-flashing, and, amid shouts and yells, the cabin rung to some half
-dozen of pistol shots fired in imitation of the leader of the
-debauch, in the midst of which a wild screech rose from the darkest
-corner of the cabin, and Josiah Ward staggered out, his face all
-blood, and fell at full length on the floor.
-
-‘Ho! ho!’ shouted Jerry, with an insane roar of laughter; ‘a bullet
-found its billet. Caulk the shot-hole with the stopper of a brandy
-flask; it will be better in a man’s flesh than in a bottle to-night.’
-
-A scream of laughter answered this proposal, and some half-dozen of
-the company getting up, either to aid or mock the wounded man, fell
-in a heap, shouting and swearing above him.
-
-‘Nixon—Tommy Nixon—you don’t drink—Nixon—you thief—you are sober,’
-yelled Jerry. ‘There’s mischief in it—comrades! mischief! But here,
-we’ll alter all that—bring hither that tub.’
-
-The tub of which he spoke was an empty bucket, which rolled upon the
-floor. It was immediately plucked up, and trundled along the table to
-where he stood staggering at the head of it.
-
-‘Now fetch me them brandy-bottles,’ cries the mate.
-
-‘Go easy, go easy,’ says Nixon.
-
-‘Easy,’ retorted Jerry, in his passion; ‘thou art but a cur, Tommy
-Nixon, to shirk the bottle in that fashion; but thy throat shall
-scald for it—there.’
-
-And at the last word the drunken villain caught up a flask of brandy
-by the neck, and smashed it into the bucket. ‘There, and there, and
-there,’ he shouted, dashing in bottle after bottle. ‘And now, Nixon,
-since you wont drink brandy raw, you shall drink it burning, my son.’
-
-In a moment, and before any one could interfere, the savage caught up
-a candle, burning on the table before him, and flung it all alight
-into the raw spirits.
-
-Rumbold and I uttered a cry of horror as the brandy flashed up in
-a blue flickering blaze to the very ceiling of the cabin, but the
-besotted company only shouted and cheered.
-
-‘Come, Tommy Nixon,’ roared the mate, ‘dip thy beak into that
-snapdragon—come.’
-
-And so saying, he grasped the man with both his brawny fists.
-
-‘Let go, let go your hold, you idiot!’ cried Nixon, ‘you will have
-the ship on fire.’
-
-‘And what’s that to me!’ shouted the infuriated man. ‘An’ you will
-not drink, by God I shall souse thy head in the burning liquor.’
-
-At these words they grappled, and yelling and cursing, they fought
-for a minute or two, staggering backwards and forwards, when the
-brute force of Jerry prevailing, he dragged Nixon up to the blaze,
-and dashed him head first into the flame, falling himself on the top
-of the struggling wretch, and upsetting the tub, which instantly sent
-a flood of liquid fire surging all over the cabin.
-
-Oh, then, the oaths, the yells, the frantic strugglings, which filled
-that hell upon the waters! Dozens of bottles had been already broken
-or spilt, and their contents, surging about, had thoroughly drenched
-the clothes of the wallowing brutes, who lay sprawling upon the
-floor. The cabin was, in a moment, one blaze of flame, in which men
-with their clothes and hair a-fire, and their faces livid and ghastly
-in the glare, leaped and staggered, and sought to clamber on barrels
-and casks, blaspheming, and screaming, and scuffling madly with each
-other.
-
-‘Up, up!’ shouted Rumbold, ‘up for dear life!’ All that I have
-described took place almost in the time that one sees a flash of
-lightning. In a moment, without knowing how I had done it, I was upon
-the deck, with my clothes and hair singed, but otherwise unscathed.
-As I drew in the first blessed breath of the fresh cool night, a loud
-explosion shook the deck under our feet, and we heard the tinkling
-crash of the cabin windows as the glass was blown out of them.
-
-‘There went a powder flask!’ cried Rumbold; and then, as if the word
-appalled him, he staggered back from me, crying—
-
-‘The magazine—the magazine—it is just beneath the floor of the cabin!’
-
-What I did for the next moment I hardly know. It is only a vision, of
-rushing to the davits where a quarter boat hung—of the rope flying
-hot through my hand—of Rumbold searching frantically for oars on the
-deck, while a blue flame streamed up through the sky-light and cabin
-stairs, and the shrieks of the burning men mingled in the roar of the
-fierce fire!
-
-But in that vision, I had one awful glimpse down into the cabin. May
-I be enabled to forget what I saw! The masses of fat meat, the dry
-bedding, the clothes scattered on the floor, masses of them being
-drenched with spirits, were all flaming together, while the drunkards
-rolled, roaring and scuffling, on the table and the floor, their
-flesh actually scorching from the bones! I say no more on’t. Would I
-could think no more on’t.
-
-Over the side went we with a single leap down into the surging boat.
-‘Off, off—push off!’ And as the pinnace glanced away from the ship,
-tongues of flame curled and roared out of the cabin windows all round
-the stern. ‘Pull for life!’ We stretched to the oars like madmen, and
-the boat flew over the water. The mizen-sail, which was as dry as
-dust, for there was no dew, caught fire from the blaze, roaring up
-from the sky-light, and in a minute, the scorching element ran all
-aloft, blazing along the ropes, licking up the broad sails, making
-the strong canvas tinder, and lighting up for miles and miles the
-lone midnight sea! There! A bright sheet of red fire shot forth, as
-if a volcano had burst out under the ocean, the glare showing us for
-an instant, and no more, a vision of huge beams, and rent masses of
-timber, flying out and upwards; and then—just as we heard the sound
-of the explosion, not a loud sharp crack, but a smothered roar, which
-made all the air shake palpably around us—down with a stately swoop,
-fell the flaming mizen-mast into the sea!
-
-We sat in speechless horror—unable to move our oars. Then all the
-fire, low and aloft, disappeared with a loud hiss, and a great white
-cloud of steam rose boiling from the wreck, loud sounds of cracking
-and rending timber coming forth from the vapour, mingled with the
-gurgling rush of water pouring into and sucking down the shattered
-ship. After this, the white smoke rose and floated like a canopy,
-all above our heads, and we gazed and gazed, but saw nothing on the
-midnight sea.
-
-‘They are gone—it is all over,’ said Rumbold. ‘Lord, have mercy on
-their sinful souls.’
-
-To this I solemnly responded, with my heart as with my tongue, ‘Amen!
-amen!’
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXVIII.
-
-THE FOODLESS BOAT AND THE ISLAND.
-
-
-We sat, for a few moments after the catastrophe, in silence. Then
-quoth I, ‘Let us pull back, there can be no danger now, and try
-whether there be any floating wreck with any poor wretch clinging to
-it.’
-
-So we were soon, as nearly as we could judge, floating upon the exact
-spot where the ‘Saucy Susan’ foundered. It was Rumbold’s opinion,
-that the powder below the cabin had been so stowed, that the force
-of the explosion when it took fire was downwards and laterally,
-rather than upwards—and that the sides of the afterpart of the ship
-had been actually driven asunder. In such case, of course, the sea
-would pour like a whirlpool into her, and she would have gone down,
-as had actually been the case, as though she were a lump of lead.
-The mizen-mast, with a heap of scorched and blackened wreck floating
-about, was the sole memorial left of the ‘Saucy Susan;’ the mast in
-question having no doubt been broken by the force of the explosion,
-and so saved from going to the bottom with the ship. We rowed for
-hours and hours round the spot, returning often to the mast, as it
-lay all blackened and scorched, weltering in the sea, but no other
-piece of wreck could we see. Not a box, or cask, or spar, but seemed
-to have gone right down into the awful depths of the ocean. There
-was something curiously dreamlike in our situation. My mind seemed
-wavering and flickering as I thought of what had happened. Sometimes
-it would appear as though the debauch had taken place years and
-years ago, so that I remembered it quite faintly. In another moment
-I would deem that the orgy was roaring around me still. Then I would
-see the livid faces and fiery hair of the drunkards so plainly that I
-pressed my aching eyes with my hands to shut out the vision; and anon
-I would deem that it must be all a nightmare, and that I was still
-keeping the dreary mid watch upon the deck of the ‘Saucy Susan.’ But,
-no; when under the pressure of such a thought, I started up, my feet
-would slip on the uneven planks in the boat’s bottom, and I would
-start to hear the plunges of the mizen-mast as it rolled and wallowed
-beside us in the sea.
-
-And so the grey dawn came, and after it the sun, and we stood upon
-the seats of the boat, and gazed anxiously all round. The ocean was
-landless and shipless. The fresh morning breeze came merrily down,
-curling the black summit of the swells and flecking the sombre sea
-with white bars. The daylight, however, was a great relief, and we
-sat and talked of the terrible event of the night before, like two
-men telling each other sad dreams.
-
-‘We could have done nothing to save them,’ said Rumbold; ‘nothing.
-Every man was mad drunk, except Nixon, and Jerry had him clutched
-as though he were squeezed in an iron vice. They both went down, I
-warrant you, grappling each other. Their bones are lying in the wreck
-now, with their arms round each other’s necks, hundreds of fathoms
-under the boat’s keel.’
-
-I asked him what he thought of Nixon’s refusal to drink, which had
-been the real cause of the mate’s mad freak and its consequences, and
-Rumbold’s thoughts jumped with mine, when he said, that he nothing
-doubted that Nixon had determined, if he could, to fell him, and rob
-him of the pearls in the drunken riot. As he spoke this, I produced
-the shining morsels from the pouch. Rumbold looked sadly at them.
-
-‘For these gauds,’ he said, ‘two poor ignorant Indians have very
-probably been sacrificed, and now a whole ship’s company have gone
-to the bottom of the sea. True, they were villains almost every
-man, but the more need was there that they should not be hurried to
-their last account with all their unrepented sins crimson on their
-foreheads.’
-
-After some more talk in this strain, we roused ourselves, and began
-to converse of our own situation, which was bad enough, not having a
-strip of canvas in the boat to make a sail, and what was much worse,
-being without a morsel of water or food. By the best calculation
-I could make, we were near the centre of the Caribbean Sea, about
-half-way between Jamaica and Curaçoa. The regular trade-wind, blowing
-nearly from the north-east, might drift us, if we went before it,
-aided by the gulf stream, to somewhere about Cape Gracias à Dios, the
-great headland, west of which the main-land trends away to form the
-Bay of Honduras. Rumbold agreed with me as to our probable situation,
-and we computed the nearest point at which we could hope to make
-land, if we did not succeed in stumbling upon some of the small bushy
-islands or keys which lie sprinkled nor-east of Cape Gracias—we
-computed, I say, the nearest land that we could make without sails to
-be about six hundred miles distant.
-
-‘Well,’ said Rumbold, ‘we must try to get there, that is all; so let
-us set to work.’
-
-Accordingly, in about two hours, we succeeded in setting, upon one of
-the oars, a sort of tattered sail only adapted for going before the
-wind, and patched out of our shirts, by tying the sleeves together.
-Then pointing the boat’s head about west-south-west, as near as we
-could judge by the sun, we set forth upon our almost hopeless voyage,
-rowing at the same time to help the boat on, and going about four
-knots an hour.
-
-‘Four knots an hour,’ said Rumbold, ‘and six hundred miles to be
-sailed over; that gives one hundred and fifty hours or thereby, if
-the wind keeps as fair as now, and we row night and day. Now, one
-hundred and fifty hours make rather more than six days; add two days
-more—that is a reasonable allowance for resting and times of calm—in
-all eight days. Can a man live eight days without food, and, in this
-climate, without water?’
-
-‘No,’ says I, tossing aside my oar, and clapping—I confess it—my
-hands to my face; ‘no, we are fools to try it. Better to jump
-overboard at once among the sharks.’
-
-‘Take up your oar, sir,’ says Rumbold, sternly; ‘God helps those
-who help themselves. Work, sir, work. There are many chances before
-us. Perhaps an English ship—at the worst, a Spanish ship; perhaps
-an island with rain-water in the crevices of the rocks, and turtle
-sleeping on the sandy beaches, and plenty of birds and eggs.’
-
-The very words put new life into me, and we tugged away for a time
-as cheerily as, under our circumstances, might be. The wind blew
-so fresh that we feared it would blow our frail sail right before
-it. The following seas hove us, as it were, from one to the other,
-and we made better progress than we hoped for. But the heat of the
-sun, as the day wore on, was terrible, and we began to thirst. At
-night, by Rumbold’s advice, we washed our mouths with salt water, and
-afterwards, finding a pebble or two lying in the bottom of the boat,
-we sucked them to promote the flow of saliva, and keep our tongues
-cool. We tugged at the oars, but very faintly, until late in the
-night, and then we fell asleep over them.
-
-The second day was the same as the first—cloudless and hot. We
-stripped, dipped our clothes in the sea, and then put them on
-dripping; as soon as the hot sun dried them we plunged the garments
-into the sea again. It assuaged our thirst a little, but our lips
-and tongues began to swell, and turn to a horrid blackness. In the
-afternoon we were hungry for a short space, and directly afterwards
-sick at stomach, particularly Rumbold, who at length slipped down
-into the bottom of the boat, where he lay moaning. That night we
-suffered intensely from the cold, and our skins being irritated by
-the salt water, every motion was painful to us.
-
-The third day several sea-birds swam near us, regarding us curiously,
-just as the marrot had done me when I lay drowning, as I thought,
-upon the spars of the ‘Golden Grove,’ in the Bay of Biscay. The
-breeze blew very strong this day, with a heavy sea. Towards noon I,
-standing on the thafts, holding on by the oar, which was shipped for
-a mast, descried a sail at a great distance, but, losing it after a
-few moments, said nothing. Rumbold, who had been by far the stoutest
-hearted of the twain at starting, grew weak rapidly; and, as his
-strength left him, his spirits drooped. He was, indeed, an older man
-than I was, and perhaps naturally not of such a strong constitution.
-He only rowed a little this day, and towards nightfall sank into a
-sort of delirious state, and raved.
-
-The fourth day I felt I was in a hot fever, and so weak I could
-scarce crawl. Rowing was now out of the question, and Rumbold and I
-lay staring at the sky, and at each other, in the stern sheets. We
-had suffered very little from hunger, but the thirst was terrible.
-The night before I had dreamed troubled visions of wells and cool
-clear pools, and, starting up, I had much ado to refrain from
-flinging myself in my agony into the sea. Towards the afternoon
-Rumbold said, with a sad smile—
-
-‘Cleopatra, queen of Egypt, drank dissolved pearls. Pity we have not
-the means to make the beverage here?’
-
-By sundown he was raving again.
-
-The fifth day the morning breeze was long of coming, and we watched
-it, with longing eyes, ruffling the water astern. Rumbold lay silent,
-as if worn out; his eyes had a glassy, fixed look, and there were
-black rings under them. As the forenoon wore on, he pointed to the
-water around, and I saw the black fins of sharks moving along with
-the boat.
-
-‘They know when death is coming,’ he said.
-
-The sixth day Rumbold was alive, and that was all. He took my hand in
-both of his, and whispered hoarsely, ‘I have no wife—and no child—no
-one who will grieve—that is a great comfort at a time like this.’
-
-Presently black clouds arose out of the sea to windward, and began
-to spread over the whole firmament. I pointed them out, and besought
-Rumbold to take heart. ‘Rain is coming,’ I said, ‘we will live to
-reach the land yet.’ He shook his head, and his eyes grew more
-and more fixed and glazed. ‘I told you—I made you my—legatee,’ he
-muttered, with great difficulty; ‘think sometimes of the Peralta who
-helped you from the Spaniards, or of the Rumbold who died with you
-in the boat at sea.’ All this time the black clouds became heavier,
-but still no rain fell. The air was like an oven, and the rude linen
-sail drooped motionless about the mast. I took Rumbold’s head on my
-lap; he was past speaking, but he looked up from time to time in my
-eyes. At length I felt his heart flutter, and presently the beating
-stopped. No change whatever took place upon his face, except that it
-assumed that thin pinched look to which men’s features shrink when
-death lays its hand upon them. He was dead—probably for some time
-before I was certain of it. When I knew that it was so, I laid the
-corpse gently down in the stern sheets. In half an hour the windows
-of Heaven were opened, and the rain poured down in bucketfuls. Oh,
-those blessed, blessed drops! I knelt, and with my mouth agape
-swallowed them. I wrung the dripping sail above my wet lips. I licked
-the water as it trinkled in large drops down the mast. I lapped it
-up as it accumulated in the little inequalities and hollows in the
-thafts of the boat. I had soon drunk my fill. The rain gave me fresh
-strength, fresh spirits, fresh soul. But as for Rumbold, the cool
-sweet water pattered upon his rigid face—the blessed rain drenched
-his hair, and great drops ran down his hollow cheeks—but it was of no
-avail. The manna fell not soon enough, and there lay the corpse, with
-its white wet face staring starkly up to the sky!
-
-Towards night the rain-clouds broke up, and the sun came slanting
-in golden bursts down upon the leaden-coloured sea. The breeze also
-began to blow again—the well-drenched sail caught the first faint
-puffs of the wind, and we moved forward—the living and the dead,
-upon our dreary path. It was very terrible, all that long night,
-to sit alone beside the corpse. The moon rose in all her glory, and
-the ocean gleamed like molten silver about me. The white sail showed
-before me like a pale phantom, and at my side lay the stark dead man,
-with his damp pallid skin glistening in the moonlight. A dozen times
-I made up my mind to fling the corpse overboard, but I saw those
-horrible triangular fins, how they glided all round the boat, and
-my heart failed me. At length, I stripped off Rumbold’s doublet and
-covered his face with the cloth.
-
-The blackness of night faded at length—then came the grey dawn and
-the red bright sunrise—the seventh I had seen since the ‘Saucy
-Susan’ went down. I must have been in a half torpid state, for I lay
-listlessly, with my face turned to the east, waiting for the breeze
-to blow, and the morning was already becoming hot, when looking
-languidly to see if the sail was properly set, I bounded forwards
-from the stern-sheets, as though all the strength they ever possessed
-had suddenly come back to my muscles.
-
-Land! yes—land! right ahead—not a mile from me—rocks, with the surf
-white upon them—sandy beaches glistening in the sun—knolls all green
-and bushy, and slopes carpeted with Bahama grass. Here and there a
-feathery palmetta tree rising from the underwood, and clouds of gulls
-and plovers, ducks and flamingos, pelicans and man-of-war birds,
-sporting or resting in the air, on the water, or the land. I was
-close to, as near as I could judge, a group of islets, the principal
-one being surrounded by many smaller,—some of them indeed mere
-rocks,—but rocks as I saw teeming with food, and brimming, as I did
-not doubt, in all their crevices, with fresh, sweet water, from last
-night’s rain.
-
-My heart melted within me, and I sank into the bottom of the boat,
-and wept, and prayed, and gave thanks. Meantime, the sea-breeze
-coming on to blow fresh, drove the boat quickly before it, and I
-had enough to do—steering with an oar to avoid the coral reefs, and
-spits, and banks of sand, between which I was hurried—and over
-which the sea went flashing in thunder. Several times the keel of
-the boat grazed the bottom, and we were swung round and round in the
-eddies and counter-currents—but still she bore me safely on, until we
-approached a fair sandy beach, on which the surf broke high. I could
-see no better landing-place, so let the boat drive, and tied myself,
-as well as I could, for I was more dead than alive, to an oar, that
-I might have a last chance of reaching the shore. In a minute or two
-the boat was in the broken water,—she rode over two or three fierce
-crests of tumbling seas very gallantly, but then a heavier breaker
-than common curling up astern of us, fell, as it were, down upon
-the boat, and I found myself faintly struggling in the white frothy
-water, which foamed, and buzzed, and roared in my ears, and down
-into which, at length, losing all sense and consciousness, I sank—a
-drowning man.
-
-When I opened my eyes again, I knew not where I was, or what had
-happened to me. I lay in a sort of half-waking torpid state, being
-dimly conscious that I was stripped and in a bed, and that above
-me was a roof of wattled branches, and that dark figures of naked
-men—Indians as I deemed, were moving about me. Then I felt a cup put
-to my mouth, and some warm liquid, which seemed to revive and comfort
-me, and flow, as it were, through my poor wasted limbs, warming and
-refreshing them, was poured down my throat, my head being raised by
-some one behind me for the purpose. But all this might or might not
-be. For all I knew, it was a dream of delirium. I was too weak to
-speak, and even to think,—consciousness forsook me again, and I fell
-into a deep dreamless sleep.
-
-I returned again to sense and life. I was in a bed, a hammock,
-laid upon a cool mat. There was a roof of wattled branches above
-me, and there were Indians, two very old men, with grey hair and
-grey beards flowing down upon their swarthy breasts, sitting beside
-me. Furthermore, I saw that I was in a hut or cottage, artfully
-contrived in a recess or split of rock; that part of the walls
-were formed of the natural living stone, and part of very neat and
-artificial wattle-work, quite wind and weather tight. The door seemed
-to open at the end of the passage, leading upwards from the chamber,
-which nestled, as it were, down between the rocks; and through this
-door, I saw bushes and long grass waving in the wind. The light in
-the hut was somewhat dim and grey, but I could see around me great
-numbers of fishing lines, and bows, and arrows; and, looking more
-closely, I saw in little cupboards, or niches, wrought out of the
-rock, stores of provisions, with drinking-cups made from cocoa-nuts
-and great shells, and rude clay-pots for cooking. But all the
-attention I could bestow was taken up upon my hosts. They were so
-like each other, that I supposed they were brothers; the same lank
-grey hair, the same brown or chestnut hue of the skin, the same
-rather flat noses, the same black eyes, so full of cheerfulness and
-kindness, and so completely the same expression of face, that I could
-positively see no difference betwixt their features. In all respects,
-save one, the ornaments they wore were also the same. Each had a sort
-of fillet of different-coloured pebbles, through which a string had
-been passed, placed round his head, and a similar adornment round
-his neck. Each also wore thin plates of gold dangling from his ears,
-but in the fillet of one of them was fastened a wing feather of the
-toucan; this was the mark by which I distinguished one from the
-other. Their dress was very simple. It consisted merely of a sort
-of bead-embroidered petticoat, or kilt, tied round the waist, and
-reaching nearly to the knee, and a sort of mantle of strange-looking
-fabric, very soft and fleecy, which, when they sat down in the hut or
-cave, they allowed to fall from their shoulders upon the floor.
-
-While I gazed at these Indians, they conversed softly in a language
-which I had never heard, but which was very soft and melodious. At
-length, seeing my eyes open, and fixed upon them, both rose, and
-standing over me, he who wore the toucan’s feather said, gravely,
-and in excellent Spanish—
-
-‘Be of good cheer, stranger, for you are among friends.’ I was too
-weak to do aught but take their hands in mine, and try to press
-them to my breast. Presently the drink I had before taken was again
-administered to me, and one of the Indians going forth into the open
-air, returned with a savoury morsel of broiled fish.
-
-‘Eat, stranger,’ he said, in most sonorous Spanish; ‘eat, and be
-refreshed.’
-
-Thus these kind Indians fed me by degrees, and caused me to sleep
-with soothing and stilling draughts, I eating, drinking, and
-slumbering by turns; but all in moderation, so that at length I
-was enabled to sit up in the hammock, propped against a chest, and
-to falter forth my thanks, and ask how long I had been lying in
-that dreamy state? They told me, nigh three days. I asked, if they
-had found me upon the beach. They replied, the two often speaking
-together, in a low chanting tone of voice: ‘Yes, they had, flung
-there by the waves, and near me a broken boat.’ I think my eyes must
-have told them what I intended for the next question, because, before
-I had spoken it, the Indian who wore the feather said—
-
-‘And also the body of a white man. We buried him beneath a palm-tree,
-when the moon was in the heavens and the air still. He sleeps well.’
-
-Then the other took up the word—
-
-‘Truly he sleeps well; but you have been preserved; for which thank
-the God of many names and many nations.’
-
-This was towards dusk. When it grew dark the Indians lighted a torch
-of resinous wood, which burnt bright and clear, and sitting by it,
-with their cloaks or blankets wrapped round them, smoked gravely from
-long pipes made of reeds, and drank, but very moderately, the rich
-juice of the palm-tree—I meantime regarding them attentively, for I
-was still so weak that to speak was a painful effort. At last, after
-a long silence, the Indian with the feather, turning to me, said,
-solemnly—
-
-‘I am called Buonahari, and my fathers were caciques.’
-
-The other then said—
-
-‘And I am called Behecheco. I am the brother of Buonahari, born but
-an hour after him. He is still a cacique, because our fathers were
-caciques, and he is the eldest of our race.’
-
-The first Indian again interposed—
-
-‘Our fathers were caciques of Guanhani, where first white men came.
-Now, there are none of our people there, and the island is called St.
-Salvador.’
-
-The second Indian resumed—
-
-‘When we die, the race of the caciques of Guanhani will be no more.
-We are the last; but still my brother Buonahari is a cacique, because
-the blood of our fathers is the blood of caciques.’
-
-I here touched my head where Buonahari wore the feather. He seemed
-to understand the mute question, for he replied: ‘The feather of the
-toucan is the crown of a cacique. If I die first my brother Behecheco
-will take it from my head and wear it; when he dies no one will take
-it from his head; it will lie flat and rot, because the caciques of
-Guanhani are no more.’
-
-At this point I became too far exhausted to listen to more, and the
-Indians bade me sleep again. When I wakened in the night they were
-still sitting beside the torch, singing, in their melodious language,
-a low, mournful chant, which presently sent me to the land of dreams
-again. The very next day, however, after a famous breakfast of fish
-and fowl, for now the Indians allowed me to eat as much as I would,
-and that the reader may conceive was not little, I managed to crawl
-out of the hut and sit in the shade of wavy bushes, stirred by the
-cool sea breeze. The abode was contrived, as I have said, deep in
-a ravine of rocks, half clothed with bushes and rustling grass,
-which were disposed partly, as I thought, by nature, and partly by
-art, so as artificially to hide the entrance to the cave—for it
-was rather that than anything else—from any except a very curious
-and a very keen investigator. But presently the Indians returning
-from fishing, they having left me still in the hammock, they led
-me slowly and tenderly out of the ravine, and forth upon an open,
-breezy space, a sort of terrace, amid the cluster of rocks in which
-was their dwelling, and from which I could look down upon the greater
-part of the island, which seemed to be some four or five miles in
-circumference, uneven and rocky, with abundance of bays and creeks on
-the leeward side, formed by smaller islets and natural indentations
-in the coast of the greater. It was curious to observe, the trade
-wind blowing strong, the space of smooth glancing water left in the
-lee of the island, and tapering away towards the south-west. On the
-windward side, the sea broke high upon the rocks, and Behecheco
-informed me, that in stormy weather the salt spray flew over and over
-the island from beach to beach. Among the bushes and trees there
-fluttered and coo’d countless flocks of pigeons and other small birds
-of brilliant plumage; and down by the shore, the fowls which wade and
-swim dotted all the grey rocks, and glancing shingle beds, and fair
-beaches of hard dry sand.
-
-I sat long enjoying the prospect, the Indians being gravely squatted
-beside me; then I asked if there were other inhabitants of the isle
-except themselves?
-
-They replied, ‘No. None else.’
-
-‘Did not privateers sometimes come there?’
-
-‘Ships of white men of divers nations sometimes come,’ replied
-Behecheco; ‘but then we mostly hide closely in the cave. The sailors
-land, and seek for turtle, and perhaps pigeons. Then they go away
-again, and we come forth.’
-
-I then prayed them to tell me how long they had lived in that
-solitude, and from what land they came? Buonahari replied a follows:—
-
-‘Nigh two-score of years have passed away since we landed upon this
-island in a canoe. We fled here from Hispaniola, where we were slaves
-to the Spaniards. It was when we were slaves that we learned the
-tongue in which we now speak to you. Still we know that you are not
-a Spaniard, for your skin is too white, and your eyes are blue. You
-are, perhaps, then, one of those nations which come from across the
-ocean, and make war on the Spaniards?’
-
-Having assented to this conjecture, the Indian resumed thus:—
-
-‘We were slaves in Hispaniola, my brother Behecheco and I. We dug
-in the mines for gold. Our father and mother were also slaves—they
-also dug in the mines for gold. Their father and mother were likewise
-slaves, and they likewise dug in the mines for gold. So it was with
-our family for five descents. We were slaves in Hispaniola. But when
-our father and mother died, I said to my brother, “We are strong. We
-know the ways of the mountains. We have found in the woods the plant,
-which, strewed upon the path of a flying man, causes the bloodhound
-to lose the scent. Let us be no longer slaves—let us flee.” As I
-said, so we did. We fled from the mines. The Spaniards pursued us,
-but the blood-hounds lost the scent, and we came to the sea. There we
-hollowed a tree into a great canoe, according as the traditions of
-our fathers had taught us—and in this canoe we put to sea, drifting
-before the wind. We had water, and meal, and cassava, and fruits,
-and in half a moon we saw this island and landed on it. Here we have
-continued to live, and here we will die.’
-
-I was much interested in this account, for I conjectured that the
-Indians were descendants of the race of original inhabitants of
-the Leeward or Lucayas group, now called the Bahama Islands, which
-the Spaniards had first discovered, and from which they had, about
-fifteen years after the first voyage of Columbus, inveigled a great
-number of the inhabitants to make them slaves in Cuba and Hispaniola.
-This I say was my conjecture, and it was speedily verified.
-
-‘I have said,’ continued Behecheco, ‘that the blood in our veins is
-the blood of ancient caciques—the caciques of Guanhani. Though we
-were slaves, we had that blood still. Our father told us so. His
-father told him. We speak the old language of Guanhani, for it was
-taught us in our childhood. We worship the old gods of Guanhani, for
-we were instructed so to do in our childhood, and we could recount to
-you the beautiful things of Guanhani, the trees and the rocks, the
-rivers and the shores, the hills and the streams, the birds and the
-beasts, although we never saw them. Our father, who taught us, never
-saw them. His father, who taught him, never saw them. But ever from
-father to son, and mother to daughter, there flows the knowledge of
-what our race was once, and what land it ruled over. Now, alas! that
-knowledge is to perish, even as water sinks in dry sand.’
-
-I thought, as the Indian spoke thus, that both the brothers
-experienced some kind of satisfaction in recounting to another
-the secret, which would otherwise die with them, and thus keeping
-it a little longer floating in the world. Presently, after their
-accustomed fashion of alternate speaking, Buonahari chimed in—
-
-‘Our forefather, who came from Guanhani and Hispaniola, was the
-son of him who was cacique in Guanhani, when the white men landed
-upon it, and said, “Here is a New World.” Five years after he began
-to reign, there came many ships with white men. Our forefathers
-thought that the white men were gods come down from the sun, and
-they honoured them, and feared them. Then said the white men—“Would
-you see again your fathers and your mothers, who have died and gone
-to the happy valleys—to the land of Coyaba—to that land where are
-cool shades and delicious fruits—where the drought burns not up the
-ground—and the hurricane tears not up the trees? If you would go
-thither, come into our ships and we will sail with you to Coyaba, and
-we will also see your departed friends.” So our forefathers believed
-the white men, and went into their ships, and the white men did not
-take them to Coyaba, but to Hispaniola and to Cuba, and made them
-slaves to dig for gold in the mountains. Most of our forefathers died
-there, and gradually the nation wasted away—but our family did not
-come to an end, but went on, generation after generation, until we
-were begotten, and with us our family will die, and the last of the
-race of Guanhani will be taken from the earth.’
-
-Both the old men spoke as though they had already outlived all sorrow
-for their lot. Their words and gestures were grave and solemn, but
-not mournful, for their trust was, that when they died, they would at
-length go to Coyaba, and see again all their forefathers, those who
-had been slaves in Cuba and Hispaniola, and those who had borne rule
-in Guanhani.
-
-In about a week’s time I was quite restored, and daily went a
-hunting and a fishing with my Indian hosts. I had told them my
-story, to which they listened eagerly, and I had assured them, that
-if, perchance, there should come to the island a ship manned by my
-countrymen, and which might carry me away, that I would reveal to
-none the secret of their habitation, but leave them undisturbed in
-their solitary abode. I made them lead me also to where Rumbold
-lay buried beneath the palm. It was a breezy, sunny spot, and upon
-the turf I piled a little heap, or cairn of stones, such as, in
-Scotland, where they are found heaped on dreary moors, and among lone
-hills, are said by the country-people to mark the grave of a hero.
-Weeks glided away thus. The old Indians were always the same—grave,
-courteous, and kind. They fished, and set snares for birds, when
-they wanted them for food, but killed none wantonly. They ever went
-together, and with the same slow, stately step. Their talk was
-almost always of Coyaba, and the friends who had gone before them,
-and who they would meet there. In short, their demeanour and their
-speech were those of men whose minds were set upon the things of
-the new world into which they were soon to enter. The space between
-them and death was short, and their eyes seemed to be able to look
-beyond it, and to care little for what was on this side of the dark
-river. Notwithstanding, however, I drew from them many traditionary
-accounts of their people before white men had visited them; and one
-night, in particular, I asked whether there had been handed down any
-remembrance of the first white men who landed upon Guanhani—they
-being, indeed, no other than Columbus and his followers. To this
-question, Buonahari readily answered, that he had often heard from
-his father the full account of that event, as it had been handed
-down, and that, if I pleased, he would narrate it. Then, filling his
-cup with palm-wine, and trimming the torch, which cast a sparkling
-glow upon the rock-walls and wattled roof of the hut—the descendant
-of the caciques began the tale.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXIX.
-
-THE DISCOVERY OF A NEW WORLD.
-
-
-The name of my forefather, who reigned in Guanhani when white men
-first came there was the same as mine, Buonahari. He was a good
-cacique, and the people loved him; he ruled the island, and none
-disputed his sway. Then there was great plenty in the land; the earth
-bore her fruits, and the people subsisted upon them. There were no
-fish caught with hook, or spear, or net; and no birds with snare or
-arrow. The people ate only what grew—the fruits of the ground and the
-corn, and about the hut of each man was the field of maize which he
-cultivated. Then were the gods worshipped piously—the gods who sent
-the good things the people enjoyed. There were songs and dancing
-through all the land. The people met in the evenings, and lighted
-great fires upon the altars, and then the young men and the maidens
-danced, and the old men and their wives looked on, and the Bohitos,
-that is, the priests and the bards, sang songs in praise of the gods.
-
-One night there was a great feast of singing and dancing before the
-hut where my forefather, the cacique, dwelt down by the sea. All the
-people of the village were there, for the cacique and the chief of
-the Bohitos had caused proclamation to be made that every man and
-every woman should come forth from their huts to dance and sing and
-praise Zemi, the greatest of the gods.
-
-Now, when the night was dark, and the songs of the people were loud,
-the chief of the Bohitos came to my forefather, the cacique, and said—
-
-‘Why are not all the young men at the festival?’
-
-And the cacique answered, ‘They are at the festival; they have come
-from the woods and the sea to praise Zemi.’
-
-But the chief of the Bohitos answered, ‘Not so—look! there is a light
-upon the sea.’
-
-Then my forefather caused search to be made, but all the canoes were
-drawn up upon the beach above the surf. Still there was a light upon
-the sea. And the chief Bohito said—
-
-‘It is Zemi, who looks at our festival from the sea.’
-
-At these words all the people were glad, and redoubled their songs
-and their praise. Presently a flash of lightning, and a loud roar
-of thunder, came across the water, and the chief of the Bohitos and
-the people were troubled, for they thought that Zemi was speaking in
-anger. And the Bohito said to my forefather—
-
-‘Saw you ever thunder and lightning so close to the ocean?’
-
-And my forefather answered, ‘Never.’
-
-Then sad thoughts and ominous whispers began to spread among all the
-crowd; and the dances ceased, and the songs of praise died away, and
-the fire went out that was kindled on the altar of Zemi. Still the
-light burned bright upon the sea; and presently two lights shone; and
-after that three.
-
-‘There are three gods watching us,’ said my forefather; but the
-Bohito answered never a word. None went to rest that night, but
-tarried sadly on the beach waiting the day. The darkness paled away,
-and the people saw three mighty shadows on the sea. The grey of the
-dawn brightened into the day, and the people saw, as it were, three
-great houses on the sea—houses which floated, and which spread mighty
-wings to the wind, and glided to-and-fro.
-
-At this the chief of the Bohitos was troubled, and all the people
-were afraid, and kneeled down upon the beach, and prayed to Zemi;
-when, behold, the houses on the sea thundered and lightened as
-though they were black clouds in the air, and a great smoke rose
-up from them, and came with the wind down to the beach, and the
-people smelt an odour new and strange to their nostrils. But the
-prodigies were not over—great canoes came forth from the floating
-houses and approached the beach, and, rising from them upon the air,
-there swelled a mighty strain of music and figures, with faces all
-white, bearing strange weapons, which flashed in the sun, and clad
-in glorious garments, whereof none knew the name, stood in the big
-canoes, waving their arms and shouting in great joy.
-
-But one of the canoes came first, and on the prow of it was a man
-of a figure so goodly that he seemed a god. He stood up towering
-like a giant. There was glory on his forehead—there was holiness on
-his forehead. His eyes flashed like the eyes of the chief of the
-Bohitos, when Zemi enters into him and fills him. He waved in the air
-a glittering sword. He stretched forth his arms, and his big voice
-spoke tremblingly, and as if he knew not what it said.
-
-Nearer and nearer came the canoes. Then the man, who was as a god,
-waved his sword, and they paused, and he alone walked, with a
-glorious port, through the surf, which flashed beneath him, up upon
-the dry sand, and there he knelt down, and prayed and wept!
-
-But in a moment more all the white men who followed him plunged
-into the water and struggled to the land. First they knelt, as the
-foremost of them all had knelt, and each kissed the sand; then they
-knelt round about the leader, and sought to get near him to kiss his
-hand or his foot, while he stood erect among them like a palm-tree
-above weeds!
-
-This is a description of the cacique of the white strangers. He was
-past the middle age, but erect as a sapling, and sturdy as a tree.
-He had a thin, hard face, with a long hooked nose, and a mighty
-forehead, marked with deep lines like furrows. His hair was very
-short, and quite grey. He had shaggy eyebrows, and under them eyes
-which pierced, and of a grey or ash colour. He had a scanty beard,
-which hung in a peak from his chin, with very few hairs on the upper
-lip. He was not tall, but handsome and strong. On his head he wore
-a hat looped with golden chains and crowned with feathers, and his
-garments were all glittering and glorious, and in his right hand he
-ever held the naked sword! When the white strangers knelt to him, and
-when my forefathers saw the grandeur and majesty of his face, they
-felt he was a god, and they knelt likewise—the chief of the Bohitos
-and also the cacique. So the white cacique stood erect above them all.
-
-Then the white men placed in the sand an upright stick with a shorter
-stick crossing it, and all baring their heads, sang a loud song very
-solemn and slow, looking up to heaven, and making a cross with their
-fingers on their foreheads and their breasts.
-
-Meantime the cacique and the chief of the Bohitos advanced with fear
-and trembling, and prostrated themselves before the great white
-cacique. But he raised them with kind looks and gentle-sounding
-words, and put into their hands treasures—bright flat stones, in
-which whoso looked saw his own face looking back at him—and hollow
-vessels like shells, but bright and glittering, which made merry
-music when they were shaken in the hand. In exchange, the cacique and
-the chief of the Bohitos gave what they had, maize and the cloth of
-the cotton-tree. Presently, the white strangers touched the golden
-plates which hung from our forefathers’ ears, and asked by signs
-where the gold came from? and our forefathers pointed towards where
-Cuba and Hispaniola lay across the sea. At this the white strangers
-smiled to each other, and were pleased. The multitudes followed
-them whithersoever they went, and when the even was come, and the
-sun going down, the white men passed again in their great canoes to
-the floating houses with wings, in which they lived on the sea. Our
-forefathers accompanied them with songs and rejoicings in their small
-canoes, and the great white cacique, standing high above the ocean,
-waved them farewell, while the lightning flashed and the thunder
-rolled from the floating house beneath him.
-
-And this is the story of the first coming of white men, as my
-forefather, the cacique, who saw them, told it to my forefather, the
-next cacique, who was carried by them a slave to dig for gold in
-Hispaniola.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER THE LAST.
-
-I MEET OLD FRIENDS.
-
-
-Weeks passed slowly away. Twice a day, in the morning and the
-afternoon, I mounted to the summit of the highest rock in the island,
-looking anxiously round for sails, and there, by consent of the
-Indians, who felt secure in their hiding-place, I piled up a great
-mass of brushwood, ready for firing as a signal, in case of any
-English vessel approaching. During these long solitary watches I
-thought much of my life since I had been carried a prisoner to the
-West Indies. I thought how many great dangers I had undergone, how
-many narrow escapes I had made, and I began gradually to entertain
-the idea whether, upon an opportunity offering, I had better resume
-a buccaneering life, or set out across the Atlantic for home. I
-said to myself, ‘I will not return penniless as when I went forth.’
-The pearls left to me by poor Rumbold were, as he said, worth fully
-one thousand pounds, and I doubted not but that my share in the
-booty captured in the Carthagena galleon, I owning one-third of the
-schooner which took her, as well as being second officer on board,
-would come to something very considerable. Here, then, were means
-upon which I could at once return and bring happiness and wealth to
-the firesides of Kirkleslie. I brooded over these things much. Lying
-in the shade of my brushwood pile, watching the buzzing sparkling
-insects which shot hither and thither in the air—the dragon-fly
-poising his lithe body, and the brightly painted butterflies
-flitting from flower to flower, I pondered and turned the question in
-my mind. My old habits of castle-building came back upon me, and I
-erected two splendid edifices upon the foundation of the subtle air.
-
-The first was of my lot if I remained in the West Indies, or joined
-the bold adventurers who were pushing across the isthmus of Darien,
-to launch upon a career of fortune in the South Sea. I pictured
-myself the commander of a stout ship of war, nay, the admiral of a
-fleet of stout ships of war, carrying fire and sword into Panama,
-Payta, or Acapulco, capturing Spanish galleons by the squadron, and
-dictating terms to the captive governors of overthrown cities. Then,
-as I lay thinking, and watching the gorgeous proportions of this
-air-painted dream, it faded away, and another and a humbler vision
-rose; it represented the green fields and white beaches of the fair
-coast of Fife—the straggling cottages of Kirkleslie—the pier of
-whinstone, stretching forth seawards—the little rippling bay, where
-the Burn of Balwearie poured its frothing waters into the brine—the
-green bourocks of bent and waving grass, which surrounded it, marked
-with their brown patches of dry herring nets, and the rocking boats,
-riding to their grapnels in the bay. Then I saw approaching the shore
-a stout brig, lofty in her rig and graceful in her form, and I saw
-the fishers, and their wives, and their bairns, all running down to
-the beach, and shouting, with joyful clamour, that here was come
-Leonard Lindsay’s new brig, the Royal Thistle, fresh from the stocks
-at Leith.
-
-And there was another consideration too. It is sad to remember it
-now, but it was joyful to dream of it then. I had a long tryste at
-Alicant, and I thought how proud I would be, in my own stout ship, to
-carry my betrothed from her Spanish city to the northern home which
-she had chosen and which she would love.
-
-If both of these plans were, in the ending, empty and vain, at least
-one was built on a less airy foundation than the other. I determined
-not to grasp at overmuch. I decided not to let go the substance for
-the shadow, and at length I started up from the grass, and with a
-heart light as that of a boy let loose from school, I shouted, ‘Home,
-home! the rough winds and the rugged coasts of Scotland before all
-these teeming lands and summer seas!’
-
-Having once formed this resolution, I was miserable until I had the
-means of putting it in execution. From the grey dawn to the grey
-eve I sat upon my watch-tower on the hill; sometimes the Indians
-accompanied me, and we talked touching the only subject on which
-they cared to converse—the past glories of Guanhani, and the future
-happiness of Coyaba. Sometimes I was alone, tossing restlessly upon
-the turf in my impatience, wondering whether all vessels had ceased
-to sail the sea, since I saw none,—plucking out my flint and steel
-every quarter of an hour, to take care that all was ready for firing
-the beacon at a moment’s notice; or noting any change in the slant of
-the tradewind, which might cause a vessel to diverge from her course
-between the islands and the main. Several times I attempted to patch
-up the broken boat of the ‘Saucy Susan,’ which lay upon a sheltered
-bit of beach, with the tide flowing in and out of her, but she was
-injured beyond my powers as a ship carpenter to repair, and besides,
-had she been afloat and sound, I had nothing of which I could make a
-sail. The Indians possessed a canoe, but only fit for paddling.
-
-During these tedious weeks, I strained my memory in vain to make out
-whether I had ever heard of such an island as that on which I stood.
-In most of the maps of the Caribbean Sea, small specks of nameless
-isles are laid down in great profusion all round Cape Gracias à Dios,
-but I knew that these charts were, for the most part, to be little
-depended upon, except as regarded the great islands and headlands;
-and I remembered the labyrinth of rocks, islets, and reefs, in which
-we found the dwarf pilot, and which were not even indicated in any
-one chart we had on board the ‘Will-o’-the-Wisp.’ The Indians said,
-that the time of ships coming hither was very uncertain; sometimes
-two or three passed by in a moon, sometimes two or three moons passed
-by during which the sea would be sailless; now a passing ship would
-keep far off, so that her canvas would show not bigger than the wing
-of a sea-fowl; anon she would anchor in the lee of the island, and
-lie there for days, filling her water-casks from the rain ponds in
-the hollows of the rocks, and allowing the men to scamper at large,
-hunting pigeons and noddies, or searching for turtles’ eggs, all over
-the island.
-
-But at length my happy moment arrived—the long-looked for came
-at last. I ought to have mentioned, that the island upon the
-windward-side was indented by a large bay, which stretched from one
-extremity of the land to the other. In the centre of this bay, and
-near the beach, were various rocky islets and sand-banks, amongst
-which on arriving I had been driven, and upon each horn of the
-crescent, long points of high and rugged rock jutted forth into
-the sea, making that appear a deep bay which was in reality a mere
-shallow coast indentation. My signal-post, as I called it, was near
-the centre of the bay, and about a mile from each of the jutting and
-rocky horns which I have mentioned; the hut of the Indians being
-among the clefts and bushes beneath.
-
-I was wakened early one morning by the howl of the wind through the
-trees and precipices above us, and, presently going forth, found
-it blowing a hard gale right into the bay—the rocky islets before
-the beach being only now and then to be seen like black specks amid
-the foam. The gale increased as the day advanced, and about noon, a
-tremendous breaker swept so high up the beach as to catch the wreck
-of the ‘Saucy Susan’s’ boat, and fairly to drive it to pieces on the
-shingle. The day was very dark and dismal, the clouds flying fast and
-low, and the sea-birds making, in flocks, for the cover of the land.
-The horizon from my look-out was only a few miles in extent, but
-within it, the seas broke furiously, and the surf upon either horn
-of the bay was grand to look at. In the afternoon, I wandered forth
-alone upon the beach—the Indians, who did not relish such weather,
-keeping snug at home—and remained for hours in a sheltered nook upon
-the southern ridge of the bay, watching the great seas rolling in and
-assaulting the rocks.
-
-The day was wearing away, and the sun was setting behind the island,
-when I suddenly heard a shout to seaward. Starting up to my feet, I
-saw about a cable’s length distant from the bluff, on the outside of
-the bay, and a little to windward, a small sloop, showing but a rag
-of sail, and struggling hard to weather the point. The bark, though
-very small, was decked from stem to stern. Had it not been for that,
-she would not have lived a moment in such a sea. As it was, she bent
-over, so that I could see three men lying upon the slanting planks,
-holding on to the weather-rigging, while the steersman, made fast on
-the weather side to a staunchion of the light rail, which run round
-the sloop, worked the tiller by means of blocks and tackling. It was
-an even chance, so far as I could see, whether the sloop would beat
-round into the bay, or be shivered upon the headland, and I rushed
-as far out as I could upon the rocks to watch the catastrophe. On
-she came, plunging and tearing over the seas, hove up aloft, so that
-she was sometimes almost on a level with the ground I stood on, then
-ducking into the trough, so that I could only see the top of her
-tiny mainsail, with the spray of the next coming sea, torn up by the
-wind, and pelting over and over it. The figures on board held on to
-the weather-bulwarks, like grim death; but as she closed nearer and
-nearer with the rocks, I saw two of them kick off their shoes, and
-strip their doublets. A moment would now decide their fate. The sloop
-was not half-a-score fathoms from the outermost point, over which
-the sea boiled white. She sank heavily into a deep foaming trough of
-sea, and her sail flapped in the lull. Up again, as though cast by a
-sling! She leaped at the next surge—a blast which made me stagger
-back on the rocks—almost tearing the mast out of her, and lifting
-her, as it were, bodily over the furiously ridging and tumbling
-water. The wave burst in milk-white foam beneath, the spray flying
-round and over me, but from the very centre, as it appeared, of the
-seething hissing mass of the rebuffed and broken billow, the gallant
-little bark flew triumphantly round the rock, and into the bay.
-
-‘Hurrah,’ I shouted; ‘bravely done!’
-
-The men on board caught my words, even through the roar of the surf.
-He who was steering, and who had been hitherto crouching down,
-watching the run of the seas, looked up. Could I believe my eyes?
-Nicky Hamstring!
-
-‘Lindsay! Will Thistle! Hurrah!’ he shouted.
-
-‘Comrade—old comrade!’ I cried, making a speaking-trumpet of my
-hands. ‘Beach her—run her right through the surf. High and dry—high
-and dry!’
-
-The sloop was already beyond hearing, but Nicky waved his hand. Up
-goes the helm, round fly the bows of the bark towards the open white
-beach of the bay, and shorewards she shoots, leaping from sea to sea!
-
-Leaping indeed from sea to sea, but not faster than I sprung from
-rock to rock, and bank to bank, striving to be upon the beach
-before her. It was a grand race. I saw Nicky’s crew leap up, as the
-sloop, now upon an even keel, went scudding like a feather before a
-hurricane. More sail—more sail! They are shaking out two reefs in the
-canvas! They will drive her through the breakers in style! Away goes
-the widened sheet higher and higher up the mast! See how it swells,
-and tugs, and surges, as though it would pluck the craft out of the
-water by the very roots, and drag and soar with her through the air!
-I am running fast, but she heads me. See, Nicky is standing in the
-stern, and again he waves his hand! Is it in token of hope, or of
-farewell? A minute will end all. The sloop flies madly into the line
-of breakers! A sea comes white over and over her! No! she is not
-down; up she staggers on the crest of the following wave, pouring the
-water from her sides, and her crew still clinging steadfastly round
-the mast. On she goes—a dusky spot—a mere tossing morsel amid the
-wallowing surf, but the brave mast still holds on, the stout canvas
-still bears her onward, like a bird! There, down into the trough
-once more, and now aloft again on the very shoulder of a breaking
-sea, which has hove her up, as a strong man swings a child, and then
-bearing her recklessly on, dissolves beneath her keel, in a tumbling
-avalanche of creaming foam, in the centre of which the sloop is
-carried triumphantly up, upon the wreaths of sea-weed at the very top
-of high water-mark, and there, as the sea recedes, is left high and
-dry! No Deal boatmen ever beached a galley more admirably after a
-wild trip to the Goodwin Sands.
-
-The next moment I had both Nicky Hamstring’s hands in mine! Such a
-meeting! It was as if he had fallen from the moon upon me! And what
-a world of inquiries to put to each other. How had I come there?
-How had he come there? For five minutes it was nothing but such
-rapid question and answer! Then quoth I, ‘And Stout Jem, and the
-“Will-o’-the-Wisp?”’
-
-‘They cannot be five miles to windward,’ replied Nicky, ‘and running
-the same course as we when we saw breakers ahead, and beat round into
-the bay. The sloop is a Spanish craft we wanted to carry to Jamaica,
-and we were in company with the schooner all day, until she split her
-foresail; after which we got the start, and lost sight of her.’
-
-By this time it was getting dark, the gale still blowing furiously.
-
-‘We none of us had the slightest idea of land within a hundred
-miles,’ said Nicky. ‘I would to God that we had the means of giving
-Stout Jem notice of what he is running on, while he has still a mile
-or two of offing.’
-
-I immediately remembered my beacon of piled brushwood, and thanked
-heaven that I had collected it. But as we were all scampering up
-the hill towards it, we met the two old Indians coming down to the
-beach. From a snug place of espial they had seen the meeting between
-Nicky Hamstring and myself, and rightly conjecturing that they had
-nothing to fear from one who seemed so much my friend, they had come
-forth to offer a refuge to the wrecked mariners. Accordingly, leaving
-them to conduct two of the sailors whom I did not know, to the cave,
-the third being no other than my old shipmate, Lanscriffe, who shook
-hands with me heartily, he and Nicky and I were speedily standing
-beside my beacon. It was now quite dark, and seawards we could descry
-nought beyond the dull white belt of breakers. A light was speedily
-struck, and in a minute after it was applied; the brushwood being
-as dry as tinder, a bright blaze, torn and driven by the wind, rose
-flickering up into the dark night, casting long rays of light over
-the waving grass and bushes, and the white and tumbling sea. I had
-made the pile of brushwood so large, that the beacon was nothing but
-a great bonfire, and presently the two seamen we had left rejoined
-us with the Indians, carrying between them a small tar barrel which
-they had made shift to get at out of the stranded bark, the tide
-having now ebbed considerably back from it. This was a grand addition
-to our beacon, and, fed by the fat pitchy unguent, the blaze must
-have been seen leagues away. That it was seen by those for whom we
-lit it we soon had a satisfactory token, in the quickly following
-flashes of several guns, fired by a vessel near a league off at sea.
-Upon this we descended to the beach again. The Will-o’-the-Wisp,
-for Nicky Hamstring did not doubt but it was she, presently ran up
-lanterns to her main and topmast heads, and, in a few moments more,
-she burned a flaring blue light, which showed the beautiful schooner
-weltering through the seas close hauled under closely reefed fore and
-mainsails, but, as we all hoped and believed, holding her own very
-steadily.
-
-As we sat watching her upon the beach, Nicky Hamstring recounted to
-me the particulars of the attack upon Carthagena harbour after I
-had been made prisoner, and the subsequent capture of the galleon.
-My share of the booty was, it seems, lodged in the hands of Mr.
-Pratt, at Jamaica, and would be at once made over to me. To narrate
-all the particulars of the cruise of the Will-o’-the-Wisp after I
-quitted her, would be no part of my story, and I dismiss it by simply
-stating, that so many and so great were the prizes which she took,
-that not a man who sailed under Stout Jem but was, according to his
-degree, enriched, and returned to Jamaica with money, and plenty of
-it, in both pockets.
-
-Talking in this manner, the first part of the night wore away, and,
-as it waxed late, the gale began to lull. You may be sure in all our
-converse we never took our eyes from the schooner’s lights, which
-rose and sank regularly upon the seas. But we were soon relieved
-of our anxiety regarding her, by observing that she rather clawed
-away from the shore than approached it, and we knew well that not
-an eye would be closed aboard the schooner that eventful night.
-About midnight the heavy clouds to windward began to break, and the
-schooner burnt another blue light, by which we saw that she had a
-reef out of her sails, and was standing on and off snugly enough, the
-sea going down very fast.
-
-Thereupon we all retired to the cave, the Indians doing the honours
-of their abode with such simple grace, that Nicky called them two
-brown old gentlemen without clothes, and swore that he would run the
-risk of being wrecked again to be so kindly tended. It was indeed a
-happy meal! Lanscriffe and his comrades had gone down to the stranded
-ship, and returned laden with good cheer, and every few minutes, as
-we ate, and drank, and laughed, one of us would start up and run out
-to see how the schooner fared, and come back with the news that the
-wind was going down more and more, and that our friends were all
-safe, a league from the rocks, and riding as snugly as though the
-schooner were lying in a millpond.
-
-‘And all the old faces are still on board?’ quoth I.
-
-‘Every one of them,’ answered Nicky; ‘all our old party of the
-Marmousettes in Hispaniola, from Stout Jem down to Blue Peter, and,
-indeed, almost every man we shipped in Jamaica, including Mr. Bell,
-who hath become such a reformed character, that it seems as if that
-keel-hauling, which you remember, has had the most beneficial effect
-in washing the roguery out of him.’
-
-‘And the negro,’ says I; ‘the Spanish negro, we captured fishing for
-pisareros off Carthagena?’
-
-‘Oh! he was sent ashore with the sailors of the galleon, who, I hear,
-landed at Porto Bello.’
-
-‘There was,’ says I, ‘on board that galleon, one old man, a merchant—’
-
-‘He who told Stout Jem that you had escaped from the Spaniards at
-Carthagena—a grave and reverend old man,’ said Nicky. ‘He bore his
-loss so tranquilly, that I thought, and others thought it too, that
-he went over the side of the galleon into the boat with some of the
-most precious parts of his goods concealed upon, his person. A sly
-old fox, to be sure.’
-
-To tell the truth, I was not sorry to hear this.
-
-‘We got enough from him as it was, Nicky,’ I said.
-
-‘Humph!’ quoth Nicky, ‘I must say we did.’
-
-The grey dawn found the schooner anchored in the bay, and before
-sunrise Nicky and I, having obtained the canoe of the Indians for the
-purpose, leaped on board.
-
-I almost shook Captain Jem out of his hammock, into which, poor man,
-he had only just turned, after seeing that all was safe with the
-ground tackle, and that the weather looked settled.
-
-‘Captain Jem! Captain Jem!’ I cried; ‘you told the merchant on board
-the galleon, that you loved me as a son, and here is your son come
-back again to you!’
-
-I will not try to reduce to words the shout of delight with which
-the hearty old fellow jumped clean out of his hammock, and clutching
-my hands in both of his, danced me round and round the little cabin.
-It was a thorough welcome home, and almost induced me to falter in
-my resolution of immediately returning to Scotland. But the feeling
-lasted but for a moment. I loved my comrades, but I loved kith and
-kin more, and now I had that to carry back to them which would bring
-grateful tears to many an eye.
-
-And now my story is told.
-
-I have bidden a solemn farewell to the representatives of the blood
-of the old caciques, and the ‘Will-o’-the-Wisp’ is under weigh, bound
-direct for Jamaica, from whence I can easily procure a passage home.
-Her buccaneering cruise, of which I saw so little, is ended. She lies
-deep in the water, freighted with the spoils of the proud Spaniards,
-who vainly swore that theirs alone would be the empire and the
-treasure of the New World. Her merry crew will shortly be dispersed,
-and never rock in hammocks in one ship again. Stout Jem is bound
-for Europe, and mayhap we will go together. Nicky Hamstring, true
-to his opinion, that the New World is a merrier one than the Old,
-talks of enlisting under the banner of Captain Morgan, to march with
-him across the mountains to the great South Sea. Each has his plans,
-and every man’s plan is different from his neighbour’s. May they all
-prosper!
-
-And now I bid my readers a kind good by!
-
-I have told them roughly, but truly, as much of my life as was the
-‘Story of a Buccaneer.’ If they have found it stirring enough to
-while away a leisure hour, I am content. But if from it they have
-learned something of the real truth concerning Buccaneers, how the
-order sprung naturally from the greed of the Spaniards to make a
-monopoly of America—how the Buccaneers lived by sea and land—how
-they hunted, and sailed, and made war—how there were good and bad,
-honest hearts and rogues among them—in short, if they have learned
-what manner of men the Buccaneers were, and what manner of lives they
-led—then I shall be more than content; I shall think that I have
-served the memories of my brave countrymen who sleep beneath those
-western seas, and that I have given to the world some information,
-not without its uses, touching an interesting chapter of our maritime
-history.
-
-
-THE END.
-
-
-Woodfall & Kinder, Printers, Milford Lane, Strand, London, W.C.
-
-
-
-
- Transcriber’s Notes
-
- pg iii Added comma after: OF MY BOYHOOD, AND HOW
- pg iv Added missing page number 89
- pg 6 Changed gallantly. At night-fall to: nightfall
- pg 7 Changed leeward fore-topsail yardarm to: yard-arm
- pg 14 Changed would not render up a marevedi to: maravedi
- pg 16 Changed After which the quarter-master to: quartermaster
- pg 38 Added period after: hate Jack Spaniard
- pg 39 Changed spelling of: in the expedition in which l’Olonais to:
- l’Olonnais
- pg 43 Changed For the Sea, the mosquito men to: Mosquito
- pg 76 Changed ‘“Ay, nevvy,” quoth the old captain, to: Nevvy
- pg 90 Changed therefore of quite sufficent to: sufficient
- pg 101 Changed which lay close a-beam to: abeam
- pg 104 Changed I had the midwatch to: mid-watch
- pg 109 Changed I hope, never bear to: hear
- pg 137 Changed Will-o’-the Whisp to: Will-o’-the-Wisp
- pg 142 Changed “Breakers on the weather bow to: ‘Breakers
- pg 142 Changed all clear with the anchor.” to: anchor.’
- pg 142 Changed “Down with your helm to: ‘Down
- pg 143 Changed great labyrinth of sandbanks to: sand-banks
- pg 149 Changed “So you landed here to: ‘So
- pg 149 Changed “Call you that seamen’s to: ‘Call
- pg 152 Changed schooner if you don’t wan’t to: want
- pg 152 Changed have been allowed on board.” to: board.’
- pg 156 Changed schooner in the morning.” to: morning.’
- pg 162 Changed “Where is the dwarf?’ to: ‘Where is the dwarf?’
- pg 167 Changed sprit of the main-sail to mainsail
- pg 167 Changed dollars, reals, and marvedis to: maravedis
- pg 168 Changed And we echood to: echoed
- pg 168 Changed screamed joyously over-head to: overhead
- pg 168 Changed glances of the hot sun-light to: sunlight
- pg 169 Changed wavy bunches of slimy seaweed to: sea-weed
- pg 171 Changed mass of slushy seaweed to: sea-weed
- pg 172 Changed him very nervously, fidgetting to: fidgeting
- pg 176 Changed Meantine the sky was growing to: Meantime
- pg 177 Added letter e after: dwarf as we heard this. H
- pg 191 Changed chapter heading DICE IS KEELHAULED to: KEEL-HAULED
- pg 193 Changed towards the stern, which heightenng to: heightening
- pg 208 Added period after: and there was silence
- pg 212 Changed while below was a great beauffet to: buffet
- pg 214 Added quote after: sign that the waters are abated.
- pg 218 Changed trust we may say our vepsers to: vespers
- pg 225 Changed Tomorrow I was to appear to: To-morrow
- pg 225 Changed out a squadron of their armadillos. to: armadilloes
- pg 229 Changed at the rate of a brass marvedi to: maravedi
- pg 232 Changed in the harbour of Cathagena to: Carthagena
- pg 232 Changed rescue single-handed, griped to: gripped
- pg 233 Removed repeated word from: pirate shall die the the
- pg 236 Removed repeated word from: and which shall shall now be
- rehearsed
- pg 242 Changed pretended to be, in some agitatation to: agitation
- pg 244 Changed which I eagerly asisted to: assisted
- pg 251 Changed track to tell of who has cleft to: left
- pg 257 Added missing word in: I have landed from a vessel the bay
- pg 263 Added missing chapter title: THE FAMILY OF THE SPANISH
- MERCHANT.
- pg 265 Changed devil incarnate, whom they call Mountbars to: Montbars
- pg 266 Changed ‘Ay, verily,” to: ‘Ay, verily,’
- pg 267 Changed he answered that tomorrow to: to-morrow
- pg 268 Changed arching of her dark eye-brows to: eyebrows
- pg 272 Changed I will marry only you.” to: you.’
- pg 275 Changed “Eavesdropper!’ to: ‘Eavesdropper!’
- pg 277 Added quote after: everywhere for Joseffa, but——
- pg 280 Changed Spaniard would keep all to himseif to: himself
- pg 280 Changed these adventurers oft-times to: ofttimes
- pg 317 Changed from sun-down to sun-rise to: sundown to sunrise
- pg 325 Removed repeated word from: even the the most skilful
- pg 329 Changed Disco himself, a Musquito Indian to: Mosquito
- pg 332 Added period after: firing pistols in the air
- pg 334 Changed The Mosquitto man merely shrugged to: Mosquito
- pg 341 Changed thickened speech and blood-shot to: bloodshot
- pg 343 Changed short run down by the Mosquitto coast to: Mosquito
- pg 346 Changed rules of privateers-men to: privateersmen
- pg 348 Changed pitiful hound of a Portugee to: Portuguese
- pg 349 Changed from the mizenmast to: mizen-mast
- pg 349 Changed teach a cowardly Portugee to: Portuguese
- pg 350 Changed and his ancles to: ankles
- pg 361 Changed Tonquil entered it unbidden. to: Torquil
- pg 362 Changed single quote to double after: and bidding, shall
- overwhelm him.
- pg 362 Changed “Look you, Torquil Randa,’ to: ‘Look you, Torquil
- Randa,’
- pg 362 Changed “whoso in this galley to: ‘whoso in this galley
- pg 372 Changed was that villainous Portuguee to: Portuguese
- pg 381 Changed avoid all pirates, flebustiers to: flibustiers
- pg 383 Changed and whom they called ‘Captain to: “Captain
- pg 388 Added quote before: Well, captain, you know
- pg 388 Added quote after: Oxford Road shall cry,
- pg 391 Changed taken under stout L’Olonnais to: l’Olonnais
- pg 392 Changed ‘Here be what I like,’ voicferated to: vociferated
- pg 392 Changed shirks overboard after the Portuguee to: Portuguese
- pg 397 Changed ‘Amen! am en!’ to: amen
- pg 399 Changed Dios, the great head-land to: headland
- pg 406 Added quote after: near me a broken boat.
- pg 422 Changed Spanish craft we wanted to carry to Jamaics to: Jamaica
- pg 424 Added hyphen to: cruise of the Will-o’-the Wisp
- pg 426 Added quote after the letter o in: and the ‘Will-o-the-Wisp’
-
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-<p style='text-align:center; font-size:1.2em; font-weight:bold'>The Project Gutenberg eBook of Leonard Lindsay, by Angus B. Reach</p>
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-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
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-at <a href="https://www.gutenberg.org">www.gutenberg.org</a>. If you
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-</div>
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-<p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Title: Leonard Lindsay</p>
-<p style='display:block; margin-left:2em; text-indent:0; margin-top:0; margin-bottom:1em;'>or, the story of a buccaneer</p>
-<p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Author: Angus B. Reach</p>
-<p style='display:block; text-indent:0; margin:1em 0'>Release Date: February 4, 2023 [eBook #69952]</p>
-<p style='display:block; text-indent:0; margin:1em 0'>Language: English</p>
- <p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em; text-align:left'>Produced by: Bob Taylor, Tim Lindell and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive/Canadian Libraries)</p>
-<div style='margin-top:2em; margin-bottom:4em'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK LEONARD LINDSAY ***</div>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 65%">
-<img src="images/cover.jpg" alt="Cover">
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<h1>
-LEONARD LINDSAY<br>
-<span class="fs60">OR</span><br>
-<span class="fs80"><em>THE STORY OF A BUCCANEER</em></span></h1>
-<br><br>
-<p class="center fs80">BY</p>
-
-<p class="center wsp">ANGUS B. REACH</p>
-<br><br>
-
-<p class="center wsp">“<span class="smcap">No Peace beyond the Line.</span>”—<cite>Old Sailors Proverb</cite></p>
-<br><br>
-
-<p class="center fs90">LONDON</p>
-
-<p class="center wsp">GEORGE ROUTLEDGE AND SONS</p>
-
-<p class="center fs80 wsp"><span class="smcap">The Broadway, Ludgate</span></p>
-
-<p class="center fs90 wsp">NEW YORK: 416 BROOME STREET</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_iii">[Pg iii]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CONTENTS">CONTENTS.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="r10">
-
-<table class="autotable">
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl"></td>
-<td class="tdr">PAGE</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdc" colspan="2">CHAPTER I.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">OF MY BOYHOOD, AND HOW, BEING CAST AWAY AT SEA, I AM CARRIED TO THE WEST INDIES
-AGAINST MY WILL</td>
-<td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_1">1</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdc" colspan="2">CHAPTER II.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">OF MY ESCAPE FROM THE FRENCH SHIP, AND MY LANDING IN HISPANIOLA</td>
-<td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_18">18</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdc" colspan="2">CHAPTER III.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">I JOIN A BROTHERHOOD OF HUNTERS AND ADVENTURERS ON THE COAST</td>
-<td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_27">27</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdc" colspan="2">CHAPTER IV.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">OF THE LIFE OF A BUCCANEER</td>
-<td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_39">39</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdc" colspan="2">CHAPTER V.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">HOW WE ENCOUNTER GREAT DANGERS, THE SPANIARDS ATTACKING US</td>
-<td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_44">44</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdc" colspan="2">CHAPTER VI.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">HOW THE DEADLY FEVER OF THE COAST FASTENS ON ME</td>
-<td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_58">58</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdc" colspan="2">CHAPTER VII.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">THE BUCCANEERS TIRE OF THE LIFE ON SHORE, AND DETERMINE TO GO AGAIN TO SEA</td>
-<td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_64">64</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdc" colspan="2">CHAPTER VIII.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_iv">[Pg iv]</span></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">THE LEGEND OF FOUL-WEATHER DON</td>
-<td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_73">73</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdc" colspan="2">CHAPTER IX.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">THE AUTHOR, WITH SUNDRY OF HIS COMRADES, SET OUT FOR THE CREEK WHERE HE LEFT HIS
-BARK, AND THERE BRAVELY CAPTURE A SPANISH SCHOONER</td>
-<td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_89">89</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdc" colspan="2">CHAPTER X.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">THEY RETURN WITH THE PRIZE TO THE MARMOUSETTES, AND NICKY HAMSTRING SHORTLY RELATES
-HIS HISTORY</td>
-<td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_103">103</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdc" colspan="2">CHAPTER XI.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">THE BUCCANEERS PRESENTLY SET SAIL IN THE SCHOONER FOR JAMAICA, WITH A RELATION OF
-THE EVENTS WHICH HAPPENED THERE</td>
-<td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_110">110</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdc" colspan="2">CHAPTER XII.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">OF THE DEATH OF AN OLD FRIEND</td>
-<td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_125">125</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdc" colspan="2">CHAPTER XIII.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">THE BUCCANEERS SAIL FOR THE SPANISH MAIN, AND ARE CHASED BY A GREAT SHIP OF WAR</td>
-<td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_131">131</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdc" colspan="2">CHAPTER XIV.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">THE STRANGE ADVENTURE OF THE UNKNOWN SHOALS AND THE DWARF PILOT</td>
-<td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_140">140</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdc" colspan="2">CHAPTER XV.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">AT LENGTH THEY CATCH THE DWARF PILOT, AND HEAR STRANGE THINGS TOUCHING A TREASURE</td>
-<td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_157">157</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdc" colspan="2">CHAPTER XVI.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">HOW THE DWARF TURNS TRAITOR, AND OF HIS FATE</td>
-<td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_170">170</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdc" colspan="2">CHAPTER XVII.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">OF THEIR UNSUCCESSFUL SEARCH FOR THE SUNKEN TREASURE—WEARYING AT LENGTH OF THE
-UNDERTAKING, THEY PURSUE THEIR COURSE—THE LEGEND OF ‘NELL’S BEACON,’ OR THE ‘CORPUS SANT’</td>
-<td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_183">183</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdc" colspan="2">CHAPTER XVIII.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_v">[Pg v]</span></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">A KNAVE OF THE CREW PLAYING WITH COGGED DICE IS KEEL-HAULED</td>
-<td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_191">191</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdc" colspan="2">CHAPTER XIX.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">WE CRUISE OFF CARTHAGENA AWAITING THE GALLEON, AND I FALL INTO THE HANDS OF THE
-SPANIARDS</td>
-<td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_205">205</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdc" colspan="2">CHAPTER XX.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">I AM TRIED AND TORTURED BY THE SPANIARDS</td>
-<td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_220">220</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdc" colspan="2">CHAPTER XXI.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">HOW I ESCAPE FROM THE SPANISH GUARDHOUSE—AM CHASED BY BLOOD-HOUNDS IN THE WOODS,
-AND HOW AT LENGTH I FIND A STRANGE ASYLUM</td>
-<td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_243">243</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdc" colspan="2">CHAPTER XXII.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">THE FAMILY OF THE SPANISH MERCHANT</td>
-<td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_263">263</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdc" colspan="2">CHAPTER XXIII.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">HOW WE SAIL TO JOIN THE PEARL FLEET, AND THE NEGRO DIVER’S STORY</td>
-<td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_282">282</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdc" colspan="2">CHAPTER XXIV.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">MY ADVENTURES AMONG THE PEARL FISHERS, AND MY ESCAPE FROM THE FLEET</td>
-<td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_303">303</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdc" colspan="2">CHAPTER XXV.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">THE PIRAGUA IS PICKED UP BY A GREAT PRIVATEER, AND I FIND MYSELF AMONG NEW SHIPMATES</td>
-<td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_338">338</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdc" colspan="2">CHAPTER XXVI.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">THE LEGEND OF THE DEMON WHO HAUNTS POINT MORANT IN JAMAICA</td>
-<td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_357">357</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdc" colspan="2">CHAPTER XXVII.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">WHAT HAPPENS ABOARD THE ‘SAUCY SUSAN’—AND THE ENDING OF HER AND HER CREW</td>
-<td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_369">369</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdc" colspan="2">CHAPTER XXVIII.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_vi">[Pg vi]</span></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">THE FOODLESS BOAT AND THE ISLAND</td>
-<td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_397">397</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdc" colspan="2">CHAPTER XXIX.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">THE DISCOVERY OF A NEW WORLD</td>
-<td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_412">412</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdc" colspan="2">CHAPTER THE LAST.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl">I MEET OLD FRIENDS</td>
-<td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_416">416</a></td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_1">[Pg 1]</span></p>
-</div>
-<p class="center fs150">LEONARD LINDSAY;</p>
-
-<p class="center fs60">OR,</p>
-
-<p class="center fs130">THE STORY OF A BUCCANEER.</p>
-
-<hr class="r10">
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_I">CHAPTER I.<br><br>
-
-<span class="fs80">OF MY BOYHOOD, AND HOW, BEING CAST AWAY AT SEA, I AM <br>
-CARRIED TO THE WEST INDIES AGAINST MY WILL.</span></h2>
-
-
-<p>It was in the fair sunlight of a May morning, in the
-year of Grace 1672, that that great brave ship, the
-Golden Grove of Leith, hoisted her broad sails, with
-many a fluttering pendant and streamer above them, and
-stood proudly down the Firth of Forth, designing to
-reach the open ocean, not far from the hill, well known
-to mariners by the name of the North Berwick Law.
-On board of the Golden Grove, I, <span class="smcap">Leonard Lindsay</span>,
-then in my twenty-second year, was, you must know, a
-sailor, and I hope a bold one. My father was a fisherman,
-and, as I may say, his coble was my cradle. Many
-a rough rocking in truth it bestowed upon me, for it was
-his use even before I could go alone, to carry me with
-him a fishing, wrapped up, it may be, in a tattered sail,
-while my mother, with a creel upon her back, journeyed
-through the landward towns, and to the houses of the
-gentry, to sell the spoil of hook and net.</p>
-
-<p>We fared hard and worked hard; for no more industrious
-folk lived in the fisher-town of Kirk Leslie, a
-pleasant and goodly spot, lying not far from the East
-Neuk of Fife, than old Davie Lindsay and Jess, his wife<span class="pagenum" id="Page_2">[Pg 2]</span>
-and my mother. Many a weary night and day have
-come and gone since I beheld that beach whereon I was
-born; but I can yet shut my eyes and see our cottage
-and our boat—called the “Royal Thistle”—rocking at
-the lee of the long rough pier of unhewn whinstone,
-gathered from the wild muirs around, which ran into the
-sea and sheltered the little fisher harbour, formed by the
-burn of Balwearie, where it joins the waters of its black
-pools to the salt brine. Opposite our house was a pretty
-green bourock, as we called it, that is to say, a little hill,
-mostly of bright green turf, with bunches of bent and
-long grass, which rustled with a sharp sad sound when
-the east wind blew snell, and creeping cosily into the
-chimney neuk, we would listen to the roaring of the
-sea. But the bourock was oftentimes brown with nets
-or with wet sails stretched there to dry, and below it
-there lay half-buried in the sand, old boats, mouldering
-away and masts and oars all shivered, bleaching like big
-bones in the sun and the rain.</p>
-
-<p>I remember old Davie Lindsay my father well.
-He was a stern, big man, with a grisly grey beard,
-shaved but once a month. No fisher on the coast had a
-surer hand for the tiller, or a firmer gripe to haul aft
-the sheet of the lugsail in a fresh breeze and a gathering
-sea. Often when we were rising and falling on the
-easterly swell, half-a-score miles from Kirk Leslie pier,
-he loved to tell me old-world tales and sing old-world
-songs of the sea. Then would he recount how the Rover
-sunk the bell which good abbot Ignatius, of Aberbrothwick,
-caused to be placed upon the wild Bell Rock, as a
-guide to poor mariners; and how the pirate dreed the
-weird—that is, underwent the fate—he had prepared for
-himself, and was lost with ship and crew on that very
-reef. Sometimes, too, he would drop his voice, and when
-I came close to him, he would speak of great monsters in
-the sea; of the ocean snake, whose head looked up at the
-bridge of Stirling, and whose tail went nine times round
-the Bass; of singing mermaids, who come upon the
-yellow sands at night, and beguile men with their false<span class="pagenum" id="Page_3">[Pg 3]</span>
-lays, till they leave house and home, being bewitched by
-the glamour of elfin palaces under the brine; and, most
-terrible of all, of phantom ships with crews of ghosts,
-which sailors see by the pale glimmerings of the moon,
-when it shines through the driving scud, upon a mirk
-midnight and a roaring sea. But, then, if I was frightened
-and cried, my father would straightway change the
-theme, and burst out with a strong clear voice into some
-loud fishing-song, or, what I loved better still, into some
-brave, ancient ballad, about the fair kingdom of Scotland,
-and its gallant kings and stalwart knights; and of such,
-my favourite was the lay of Sir Patrick Spens, for he was
-both a knight and a sailor.</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“The king sits in Dunfermline town,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Drinking the blude-red wine,</div>
- <div class="verse indent1">O whare will I get a skeely skipper</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">To sail this ship of mine?</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“Then up and spake an eldern knight,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Sat at the king’s right knee,</div>
- <div class="verse indent1">Sir Patrick Spens is the best sailor</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">That ever sailed the sea.”</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Oh, I can yet hear my father’s strong voice rising over
-the dash of the water and the moan of the wind, as he
-sung the brave voyage of Sir Patrick to Norroway, to
-bring home the king’s daughter; but his tones would
-sink and grow hoarse and low, when he chanted the
-storm, and the perishing of all the fair company on the
-voyage home.</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“O forty mile off Aberdeen</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">’Tis fifty fathom deep,</div>
- <div class="verse indent1">And there lies gude Sir Patrick Spens,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Wi’ the Scots lords at his feet.”</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>My father’s long home was also the bottom of the sea.
-One wild March day, the coble left Kirk Leslie pier
-without me. I staid at home mending a dredge-net with
-my mother. The easterly har was on the coast, that is
-to say, thick cold mists and a keen wind. As the sun
-rose high so did the tempest; we could see nought seaward,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_4">[Pg 4]</span>
-for the grey fog was out upon the water, but every
-wave came white, over and over the pier, from end to
-end. My mother went to and fro, wan, and praying to
-herself; as indeed did many another fisher-wife, for they
-had great cause. The night was awful. I sat cowering
-beside my mother, who was rocking herself on a settle
-with her apron over her head; or now and then stole
-down to the beach, to where men stood with lanterns
-upon masts to show the harbour mouth to the poor folks
-at sea. Three boats, with crews pale and worn, made
-the land before the day; an hour after dawn our coble
-came tossing to the outside belt of the surf—but she
-was bottom upwards.</p>
-
-<p>In a month after this, my mother and I went to her
-father’s, a very old man, and a reverend elder of the kirk.
-He sent me to school to Dominie Buchanan, a learned
-carle, who by his own account behoved to be of the race
-of the great Geordie Buchanan, of whom they tell merry
-tales, which surely are idle and false, for he was a severe,
-grave man, and handled the tawse unmercifully, as his
-royal pupil, gentle King Jamie, could in his time well
-testify. At school I was diligent, and pleased master
-and friends.</p>
-
-<p>Afterwards, up to my sixteenth year, I went much a
-fishing in the boat of Saunders Draugglefute, my maternal
-uncle, when desiring to see more of my country than
-could be descried in our furthest voyages between Kirk
-Leslie pier and the deep-sea fisheries at the back of the
-Isle of May, I made many coasting trips, for the space of
-near five years, in the stout brig Jean Livingstone, belonging
-to Kirkaldy, during which time I twice visited
-the Thames and the city of London; plying also once
-each year with a great cargo of herrings to Antwerp, in
-the Low Countries. But still I wished to see the world
-further from home, and to this intent preferred rather to
-go on board the Golden Grove of Leith, as a common
-sailor, than to be mate of the Jean Livingstone, a promotion
-which was offered me by John Swanson, skipper and
-part owner of the brig.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_5">[Pg 5]</span></p>
-
-<p>The reason of my coming to think of the Golden Grove
-was, that the Jean Livingstone having a cargo of goods
-from Yarmouth to Edinburgh, lay while they were delivered
-close by the great ship, then preparing at the foot
-of Leith Wynd for a voyage to Italy, and from thence to
-divers ports on the Moorish side of the Mediterranean sea.
-Now Italy was a land which I had long wished to behold,
-as being once the seat of that great people the Romans,
-some knowledge of the poetry and philosophy of whom,
-the worthy Dominie Buchanan had not failed to instil into
-me, but which I ofttimes felt with pain to be fast fading
-from my mind. Indeed, I must tell you that it is to the
-exertions of that learned man that this narrative is altogether
-owing, for he, seeing, as he was pleased to say, a
-more congenial soil in my mind for the seeds of his instructions
-than was presented by the other fisher-boys,
-took great pains to imbue me with a love for the humanities,
-which has not deserted me entirely unto this day.
-After much pondering upon my prospects, I therefore
-finally made up my mind to offer myself on board of the
-Golden Grove, which I did, and was accepted without
-more ado. My friends would have me pause and think of
-the dangers of unknown coasts, and pirates and robbers
-of the sea, but I knew Captain John Coxon, of the
-Golden Grove, to be a stout and experienced seaman,
-and one who was readily trusted with rich freights—while
-as to freebooters, when I looked upon the array of
-culverins, demi-culverins, and falconets ranged upon the
-decks, and also the show of carabines and patterreroes
-placed about the masts, with many stout fellows to man
-and wield them, I felt we could bid defiance to any rover
-who ever sailed out of Sallee.</p>
-
-<p>Therefore, to make a long story short, we completed
-our cargo, took in provisions and water, and, as has been
-said, on a fine May morning, I do not remember the
-exact day, sailed. The wind was so fair that by even-fall
-we saw St. Abb’s Head.</p>
-
-<p>And here at the outset of what was to me so adventurous
-a voyage, I would describe my captain and my shipmates,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_6">[Pg 6]</span>
-as well as the stout vessel herself, the latter being
-indeed a brave craft, with top-gallant forecastle and high
-poop, surmounted by three great lanterns; but, as the
-reader will shortly perceive, the Golden Grove and I soon
-parted company, and I never saw either her or any of her
-crew again.</p>
-
-<p>We carried the fair north wind with us all along
-the English coast, until passing through the straits of
-Dover, we bade farewell to the white cliffs. Then in two
-days’ time we saw upon the larboard bow great rocks
-which form the cape called La Hogue, in France,
-and passing to the westward of the island of Guernsey,
-sighted the little isle of Ushant lying off the port of
-Brest, where the French maintain fleets and great naval
-stores. Hereabouts the wind changed, veering round to
-the westward, and speedily rolling in upon us billows
-so vast that we could well discern that we were no longer
-in the narrow seas, but exposed to the great strength and
-fierceness of the Atlantic or Western ocean. Notwithstanding,
-however, we made good progress; the breeze
-was not steady but blew in squalls, making it often
-necessary to hand topsails, and raising great seething
-seas around us, over which the Golden Grove rode very
-gallantly. At nightfall, on the eighth day of our voyage,
-we lost sight of Ushant and entered into the great Bay
-of Biscay. The sea here runs exceedingly high, tumbling
-in to the shore in great ridges of blue water; but with a
-stout ship, well manned, the nature of the waves is not so
-dangerous as that of the short, boiling surges in the North
-Sea. And now I come to the accident which so sadly determined
-my lot for many a day.</p>
-
-<p>On the morning of either the 13th or the 14th of May
-the weather was squally and unsettled, and the sea
-irregular and high. About eight o’clock, looking forth to
-windward, I saw a great blackness in the sky, which I
-took to be the prelude of a gust of no common strength.
-At the same moment, the mate of the watch ordered the
-topmen aloft to hand the topsails, we carrying at the
-moment no higher canvas. My station was upon the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_7">[Pg 7]</span>
-leeward fore-topsail yard-arm, and as I clung by the man-ropes
-to the great creaking pieces of timber, grasping the
-fluttering canvas of the sail, I thought I had never seen
-a finer sight than the great rolling ship below, wallowing
-and labouring in the white foaming seas, which would
-sometimes strike her and pour heavy masses of clear
-green water in a flood over the decks. When we were
-securing the sail, the motion aloft was very great, we
-being violently swung from side to side in such wise as
-might well make giddy even the grizzled head of an old
-mariner. Meantime, the gust to windward was coming
-fast; the blackness increased, and a rushing sound, as of
-the chariot wheels of a host, rose above the rude clamour
-of the sea. Then, amid great showers of flying brine,
-which it drove before it, the fierce wind struck the
-Golden Grove bodily over upon her side. At the same
-instant, I heard a hoarse voice below summoning the
-men from the yards down upon deck; but as I was about
-to obey, the tempest grew terrible. There were great
-clouds of mist above me, through which I could see
-nought below but the white patches of waves breaking
-over the strong bulwarks of the ship. Suddenly the
-canvas, which had not been quite secured, was torn
-open, as it were, with a loud screech by the wind, and
-flapped and banged so that I felt the very mast shake and
-quiver violently, while I received rude blows from the
-loose and flying ropes, insomuch as, being half blinded by
-that and the pelting of the brine, I shut my eyes, and
-bending down my head grasped the yard firmly in my
-arms. I might have remained thus three or four seconds,
-when I heard the loud howl of the wind suddenly increase
-to a sort of eldritch scream. In a moment, the mast
-gave two violent jerks, and with the third I heard five or
-six sounding twangs like the breaking of harp-strings,
-and immediately a crashing of wood. Then, still clinging
-to the yard, I was hurried with a mighty rush through
-the air, and suddenly plunged down into the choking
-brine, which rose all gurgling over my head, and I knew
-at the same time that the Golden Grove had carried<span class="pagenum" id="Page_8">[Pg 8]</span>
-away her fore-topmast, and that I was overboard in the
-boiling sea.</p>
-
-<p>By instinct, I suppose, I struggled so to climb upon
-the floating wreck as to get my head and shoulders above
-water. Then I saw that I was alone in my misery. I
-have said that my station was at the outer end of the
-yard, and I conceive that my shipmates must have gained
-the top, and from thence, I hoped, the deck. But as for
-me, I saw nought but speedy drowning for my fate.
-The seas rose in great foaming peaks and pyramids
-around me, and the wind drove drenching showers from
-the crests of the waves down into the hollows. All
-around gloomy clouds passed swiftly, torn by the squall,
-but the pitchy darkness which showed where its strength
-lay, was far down to leeward, and looking thereat as I
-rose upon a higher sea than common, I faintly descried
-the ship in a crippled plight, but having managed to put
-her helm up so as to scud before the storm. She was
-already near a league away, and leaving me fast; so that
-the bitterness of death rose up in my very heart. For a
-moment I thought I might as well die at once, and
-letting go my hold of the spars, I allowed myself to sink
-backward into the sea. But God has wisely made man
-to love life with a clinging love, and to grapple with
-death as with a grim enemy. Therefore, as the water
-closed above me, and I felt suffocating, I could not help
-making a struggle, which soon replaced me on my
-desolate seat on the floating wreck. I looked at the
-spars, and saw that the topmast had broken only about a
-foot beneath the place to which the yard had been
-lowered. Nearly the whole of the foretop and the top-gallant
-masts of the Golden Grove, with the fragments of
-the foretopsail, which had been rent almost into ribbons,
-and the yard to which they were fastened lay therefore
-in the sea. I clambered in from the end of the yard,
-and took up my position where the mast and it crossed
-each other; making myself fast thereto with one of the
-numerous ends of broken rope which abounded, and for
-near an hour sat dismal and almost broken-hearted, unheedful<span class="pagenum" id="Page_9">[Pg 9]</span>
-of how the waves tossed me to and fro, or how
-they sometimes burst over and almost stifled me. I was
-somewhat roused by a feeling of warmth, and looking
-abroad saw that the clouds had broken, and that the sun
-was shining brightly on the sea. The wind was also
-abated, and the waves not combing so violently, I was
-more at ease. Then I heard that terrible sound—the
-sound of the sea alone—which no one who has listened
-to save he who has swam far from any vessel, or who,
-like myself, has clung to a driving spar. On the beach
-you hear the surf, where the waves burst upon rock or
-sand; on shipboard you hear the dashing of the billows
-on counter and prow; and, above them all, the sigh of
-the wind and the groaning of timbers and masts. But to
-hear the sea alone, you must be alone upon the sea. I
-will tell you of the noise: it is as of a great multitudinous
-hiss, rising universally about you—the buzz of the
-fermenting and yeasty waves. There are no deep, hollow
-rumblings; except for that hissing, seething sound, the
-great billows rise and sink in silence; and you look over
-a tumbling waste of blue or green water, all laced, and
-dashed, and variegated with a thousand stripes, and
-streaks, and veins of white glancing froth, which embroider,
-as it were with lace, the dark masses of heaving and
-falling ocean. Hearing this sound, and seeing this sight,
-I tossed until the sun got high and warm. I felt no very
-poignant anguish, for my soul was clothed, as it were, in
-a species of lethargy—the livery of despair. Sometimes
-only I tried to pray, but thoughts and tongue would
-grow benumbed together.</p>
-
-<p>Once, indeed, I was for a time aroused. I heard a
-sharp little dash in the water, and a soft quackle, as of a
-sea-fowl. Looking up, I descried beside me two ducks of
-that species which we, in the Scottish seas, called marrots;
-they are white on the breast and neck, and brown above,
-and have very bright, glancing, yellow eyes. Moreover,
-they dive, and use their short wings under water, as other
-fowls do theirs in flying. By the appearance of these
-creatures I knew that land was, at farthest, within two<span class="pagenum" id="Page_10">[Pg 10]</span>
-days’ sail. There—tilting gaily over each sea—they
-swam for hours, seeming to look at me; sometimes they
-would dive, but they never went far from the wreck,
-always coming up and riding head to wind, with their
-keen yellow eyes fixed as I thought upon the poor
-drowning mariner. They seemed tame and fearless—for,
-indeed, what should they dread from me? Once, in a
-sort of melancholy mirth, I raised my arm threateningly,
-but they stirred neither wing nor leg to flee, lifting over
-seas which would make a great man-of-war work and
-groan to her very keel, but which these feathered ships,
-built by God, could outride without a film of down being
-washed aside from their white breasts.</p>
-
-<p>The sun having attained its zenith began to descend
-the westerly skies, and the afternoon was fair and warm,
-the wind now blowing but a summer breeze. Sometimes,
-when on the crest of the swell, I looked anxiously for a
-sail, but I saw nought save the bright horizon, against
-which the sharp outlines of the waves rose and fell in
-varying curves and ridges; so that now again I
-resigned myself to death, and covering my face with my
-hands, I, as it were, moaned, rather than sung inwardly
-to myself, many verses of psalms, which, when I was but
-a little child, I had repeated at my mother’s knee.
-Meantime, I began to feel a stiffening and a heavy
-drowsiness over all my limbs and upon my soul. When
-I opened my eyes the heaving waters turned into divers
-colours before my sight, so that I knew that my brain
-was wandering, and that my soul was departing. Howbeit,
-a holy tranquillity came down upon me. The blue
-sea appeared to melt away, and I saw—but dimly—the
-green bourock and the sweet soft swarded links of the
-Balwearie burn, with the brown herring nets drying on
-the windy grass. The place seemed holy and still; the
-sun was hot, and none were stirring, and presently I
-knew it was a summer’s sabbath day, for from out the
-open windows of the grey old kirk there came a low
-sound of psalmody, and I heard, as it were, in my brain,
-the voices of the congregation, as they sang—</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_11">[Pg 11]</span></p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“In Judah’s land God is well known,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">His name in Israel’s great,</div>
- <div class="verse indent1">In Salem is his tabernacle,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">In Zion is his seat.”</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>After this, there came on me silence and darkness, I
-having gradually fallen into a fit or trance.</p>
-
-<p>I was roused by rude shocks and pulls, and a confused
-clamour of voices. Opening my eyes with effort, I saw
-surging upon the broken water, close to the spars, a
-ship’s boat with men, one of whom—he who rowed the
-boat oar—had grasped the collar of my sea doublet, and
-was hauling me into the pinnace, in which effort he
-succeeded, ere I could well make out whereabouts I was.
-At the same time several voices asked, in two different
-languages, what was my name and country, and how I
-came there. Now, of both of these tongues I had some
-smattering, the one being French and the other Low
-Dutch, of which I had heard and picked up somewhat in
-my several voyages up the river Scheldt to Antwerp.</p>
-
-<p>I therefore, trying to muster my senses, replied truthfully
-that my name was Leonard Lindsay—that I was a
-Scotsman, a mariner of the ship Golden Grove, of Leith,
-wherefrom I had fallen overboard, the spar to which I
-clung having been, as, indeed, they might perceive, blown
-away in tempestuous weather.</p>
-
-<p>At this they consulted in a low tone amongst themselves.
-They were all seafaring men, mostly very
-swarthy, and tanned by the sun and the wind. They
-wore long black hair, and silver and gold earrings, which
-glanced amid their greasy curls. Only two were fair and
-blue-eyed—namely, the men who first addressed me in
-Flemish or Dutch. After remaining for a brief time
-beside the spars, and seeming to consult as to whether
-they were worthy to be made a prize of, they decided in
-the negative, and dipping their oars into the water, rowed
-away, the steersman narrowly watching the run of the
-seas, so as to avoid being broached-to and swamped. In
-the meantime, I had clambered from the bottom of the
-boat, and looking over the bows, saw, not more than a<span class="pagenum" id="Page_12">[Pg 12]</span>
-third of a mile from us, a bark, which appeared to be
-both small and frail to contend with such a sea. The
-manner of her rig was new and strange to me, for she
-carried two masts, both very stout and short, and above
-them were two great supple yards, upon which was
-spread a good show of canvas, each sail being of that
-triangular form, called by the seamen who use them,
-lateen. In fine, the ship belonged to a port on the
-Mediterranean coast of France, and was of the class
-named feluccas.</p>
-
-<p>It was necessary to approach the vessel with great
-caution, inasmuch as she rolled and surged excessively.
-We therefore came slowly up, under her lee-quarter, and
-a man, of very dark complexion, and the fieryest eyes I
-ever saw, jumped up upon the gunwale, and hailed the
-boat in French, but talking so rapidly, that I could make
-nothing of it. Then, a line having been thrown on
-board, it was made fast to me, and without more ado,
-I was soused into the sea, and dragged on board the
-felucca, where I lay panting on the deck, while the crew—very
-wild and fierce-looking sailors—amused themselves
-with my wretched appearance. Presently, however,
-the man who had hailed the boat, and who seemed to have
-great authority on board, came up to me, and putting the
-rest aside, said more deliberately than before, but still in
-French, and with a peculiar accent—</p>
-
-<p>‘You are not, then, a Spaniard?’</p>
-
-<p>I mustered my few words of French, and answered,
-that—‘I was not, but a Scotsman.’</p>
-
-<p>Without more ado, he stooped over me, and searched
-my pockets. They contained some small English coins,
-being groats and silver pennies, and also a letter, which
-Captain Swanson, of the Jean Livingstone, had written
-to me to Leith. The sight of these things appeared to
-satisfy his doubts, for he spoke a few words in a kinder
-tone to those about him, and presently leaving me, a
-man dressed in a tarnished livery, like a lackey, brought
-me a great cup of hot distilled waters, which I greedily
-swallowed, and found myself comforted and refreshed.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_13">[Pg 13]</span>
-Being, however, much exhausted from the length of time
-which I had passed in the water, I laid me down upon a
-heap of sails in the forecastle, and being taken but little
-notice of, thanked God, inwardly, for my deliverance,
-and began to drop off to sleep. Only beforehand, like a
-sailor, I observed the course of the ship. The wind being
-westerly, and she being close hauled, and labouring
-heavily to windward, I deemed, and with truth, that her
-destination must be across the Atlantic. But whithersoever
-she went, with my then feelings, mattered little;
-I was saved from an early death, and grateful for my
-escape, I fell into a deep and dreamless sleep.</p>
-
-<p>When I wakened it was dark night, and the first
-watch was set. As the wind, however, was now very
-steady, and the sea not only lower but regular, the men
-were mostly lying and dozing about the deck, except he
-that conned and he that steered. Seeing me stirring, a
-sailor presently came to me with a lantern in his hand,
-and, to my great joy, addressed me in English, asking me
-from whence I came, and the particulars of my disaster.
-Having shortly informed him, I requested that he would
-tell me what the ship was, which had rescued me, and
-what manner of treatment I might expect at the hands of
-the captain and crew. At first, he made as if he would
-put off talking of these matters, but as I was importunate,
-he asked me in turn, whether I had not heard of the great
-association of men of all nations, but principally Englishmen,
-Frenchmen, and Hollanders, who carried on a constant
-warfare with the Spaniards among the islands of the
-West Indies, and along the coast of Darien, sometimes
-even crossing that narrow neck of land, and descending
-with fire and sword upon Panama and other towns of the
-South Sea. To this I replied, that certainly I had heard
-of these companies, but only very partially and nothing
-distinctly, that they were, I supposed, the adventurers
-called Flibustiers or Buccaneers, and more anciently the
-‘Brethren of the Coast.’ My new friend made answer
-moodily, that I should most probably have ample means
-of learning more of these Freebooters ere I put my foot<span class="pagenum" id="Page_14">[Pg 14]</span>
-on British ground again—‘That is,’ says he, ‘after you
-have either escaped or served your time.’</p>
-
-<p>These phrases naturally threw me into great trouble,
-and I earnestly asked what he signified by them.</p>
-
-<p>‘Why,’ he replied, ‘that you will be sold as an
-apprentice, or in other words, as a slave, to the French
-West India company, in the Isle of Tortugas, on the
-northern coast of Hispaniola, whither we are bound.’</p>
-
-<p>At these words I grew sick at heart. ‘Better,’ I said,
-‘to have allowed me drown in that sea than to have
-rescued me only to sell me into slavery.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Not so,’ answered my companion, something sternly.
-‘You are young, and have a thousand hopes before you.
-The Hand that miraculously preserved you this day is
-ever stretched out in wisdom and mercy, readier to help
-than to chastise.’</p>
-
-<p>At this I could not avoid looking steadfastly at my
-Englishman; such phrases being little apt to fall from
-the lips of sailors. By the light of the lantern, I saw
-that he was a tall and stout old man, with something of
-great grandeur, as I thought, in his high brow and serene
-eyes. He could not have been much younger than sixty-five,
-but he was still a very strong great man, with a
-presence and bearing not like those of a wild sailor who
-has lived, as I may say, all his life with his hands in the
-tar-bucket. After some pause he went on to inform me,
-that besides himself there was no Englishman amongst
-the crew, and that he counted upon being safely put
-ashore at Tortugas, from whence he could get to Jamaica;
-for, as he said, he was not unknown to the hunters and
-privateers who frequented the former island. In reply to
-my entreaties, that he would endeavour to take me with
-him, he said it was not possible; for although the captain
-might consent, yet that many of the crew were greedy
-low fellows, who would not render up a maravedi of the
-profits, to which, by the articles of the voyage, it seems
-that they were all in some sort and in different proportions
-entitled.</p>
-
-<p>‘But be thankful,’ said my comrade, ‘that you are not<span class="pagenum" id="Page_15">[Pg 15]</span>
-a Spaniard; for had you but a drop of the blood of that
-people in your veins, a speedy death would be the best
-fate you could hope for on board a ship commanded by
-Louis Montbars.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Why,’ said I, ‘is he so inveterate against the people
-of Spain?’</p>
-
-<p>‘I find,’ returned the Englishman, ‘that you do indeed
-know little of the adventurers of the West Indies, if you
-have never heard of one of the most noted captains of
-them all. He is a gentleman of good birth, of Languedoc
-in France. In his early manhood, having taken great
-interest in reading various relations of the barbarities
-committed by the Spaniards upon the ancient and inoffensive
-Indians, the inhabitants of the islands and the
-main discovered by Christopher Columbus and his coadjutors
-and successors, Montbars, being, like many in
-the South of France, a man of warm and fierce passions
-and feelings, made a solemn vow to God and the Virgin,
-that the whole of his future life should be devoted to
-the task of revenging upon every Spaniard who might be
-placed in his power the injuries received at the hands of
-their fathers, alike by the fierce Charibs of the islands,
-and the gentle Peruvians of the main. To this intent, he
-spent all his patrimony in fitting out a ship, in which he
-sailed to the West Indies, and speedily made his name so
-famous, and so terrible to the Spaniards, that they call
-him in their language, ‘The Exterminator,’ and know
-that they can hope for not one moment’s life after they
-come into his power. In general,’ pursued my informant,
-‘he is grave, staid, and courteous, unless his mind run
-upon what I cannot but think the sort of bloody madness
-wherewith he is afflicted. And then, indeed, and more
-especially when in action with the Spaniards, he demeans
-himself more like a raging demon than a Christian man.
-He has lately had occasion to visit his native land, and I
-being also in Paris on my own business, and hearing that
-he proposed to set forth again, joined him as a mariner,
-but to be put ashore after the voyage at the island of
-Tortugas.’</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_16">[Pg 16]</span></p>
-
-<p>This was the substance of our conversation that night
-After which the quartermaster came to me, and saying,
-he understood that I had been a fisherman in my youth,
-and so must needs know how to make nets; and that
-they were in want of some seine nets for use in the keys
-or small islands of the Indies, I might therefore, by
-making them, pay my passage. To this arrangement I
-very willingly acceded, and the next day had a hammock
-assigned to me, and set about my task of net-making,
-which was pleasant enough, pursued in fine weather upon
-the deck; although, indeed, my heart was heavy and sore
-with thinking of what was before me.</p>
-
-<p>I soon discovered that my Englishman’s appellation,
-by which he was known, was Richard Wright, although
-that was not, indeed, as I afterwards found, his proper
-name. The crew were now reasonably kind to me, and
-the more so because Wright, whom they seemed to
-respect, took me in some sort under his protection, and
-upon the whole I found myself not ill off. The Captain
-mixed very familiarly with the men, as is common on
-board of privateers, and sometimes he would recite to
-them tales of the cruelties of the Spaniards to the
-Indians; how in Hispaniola the numbers of these latter
-were reduced in fifteen years from a million to sixty
-thousand; how the Spaniards worked them to a miserable
-death in the gold mines, or hunted them with blood-hounds
-through the mountains, feeding the dogs only
-upon the victims’ flesh; how the Spaniards would often
-kill these miserable people for mere diversion, or for
-wagers, or to keep their hands in, as they called it; and
-how many of these white savages had made a vow—ay, and
-kept it—that, for a certain time, they would destroy
-thirteen Indians every morning before breakfast, in honour
-of our Saviour and the twelve apostles! With such relations,
-and all of them I believe to be true, would Montbars
-seek to stir up the deadly wrath of the ship’s company
-against the Spaniards. But, in truth, this was a flame
-which required but little fanning, it being my opinion
-that had the Spaniards behaved like angels rather than<span class="pagenum" id="Page_17">[Pg 17]</span>
-demons, still the great body of ordinary Buccaneers
-would be content to treat them as the latter, so long as
-they possessed fair towns and rich mines ashore, and many
-treasure-ships and galleons at sea. Notwithstanding,
-however, it must be confessed that there never being
-a nation more proud, cruel, and arrogant than these
-Spanish—at least, in all that refers to their American
-dominions—so there never was a people more justly to
-be despoiled of their ill-gotten gains.</p>
-
-<p>But these are considerations apart from my narrative.
-Our voyage was reasonably prosperous, the west wind
-having soon given place to more favourable breezes, and
-at length, but not until after many teasing calms, which
-delayed our progress, the first welcome farmings of the
-trade wind caught our sails, and we glided swiftly towards
-the setting sun, over the great heaving ocean swells and
-undulations, from whose shining sides flying fishes would
-leap briskly forth, and within which, the water being
-wondrously clear, we usually saw, on looking over the low
-bulwarks of the bark, swift dolphins, which swam round
-and round us, even when our ship was sailing three
-leagues an hour, and many smaller fishes, one individual
-of which, called by sailors a bonetta, about a foot long
-and of a reddish colour, swam for three days and three
-nights just before our cutwater, so that the men began, as
-it were, to know that fish, and used to feed it with crumbs
-from the end of the bowsprit.</p>
-
-<p>About the 6th of June, the weather being then very
-hot, with light breezes, we crossed the line, as it is called,
-not of course the true equator or equinox, but the tropic
-of Cancer. This was, according to the custom of the sea,
-a great festival on board, those who had not passed that
-way before being obliged to submit to the ceremony of
-baptism, as they call it, which was performed after the
-manner then in use amongst French ships, as follows:—</p>
-
-<p>The master’s mate dressed himself in a strange sort of
-garment, fashioned so as to be ridiculous and burlesque,
-and reaching to his heels, with a hat or cap made to
-match. In his right hand he held a great clumsy wooden<span class="pagenum" id="Page_18">[Pg 18]</span>
-sword; in his left a pot of ink. His face he had besmirched
-with soot, and he wore an uncouth necklace
-made of strings of blocks or pulleys, such as are used in
-the rigging for ropes to pass through. Thus accoutred,
-all the novices knelt down before him, while he favoured
-the shoulders of each with a smart slap of the sword,
-smearing also a great cross upon his brows, or sometimes
-over all his face with the ink. Immediately after, the
-novice was drenched with dozens of buckets of water, and
-the ceremony ended by his depositing his offering, as they
-call it, of a bottle of brandy, which must be placed in perfect
-silence at the foot of the mainmast. For myself,
-I underwent the mummery with the rest, and had, fortunately,
-sufficient in my pocket to contribute my bottle of
-brandy. One of the Hollanders on board told me that
-their mode of baptism was different; they either insisting
-upon a ransom, according to the station of the novice, or
-hoisting him to the main yard and from thence dropping
-him into the sea three several times. ‘If, however,’ said
-my informant, a simple man, ‘he be hoisted a fourth time in
-the name of the Prince of Orange, or of the master of the
-vessel, his honour is reckoned more than ordinary.’ In
-case of the ship—I speak still of the Hollanders—never
-having passed that place before, the captain is bound to
-give the mariners a small runlet of wine, which if he
-neglect to do, they maintain that they may cut the stem
-off the vessel. But in French and in Dutch ships, the
-profits accruing from the ceremony are kept by the
-master’s mate, and spent upon the arrival in port, in a
-general debauch by all the seamen.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="r10">
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_II">CHAPTER II.<br><br>
-<span class="fs80">OF MY ESCAPE FROM THE FRENCH SHIP, AND MY LANDING<br>
-IN HISPANIOLA.</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p>And now, being fairly within the grasp of the trade wind,
-we sped swiftly on towards those western islands whither
-we were bound, experiencing, however, as we approached<span class="pagenum" id="Page_19">[Pg 19]</span>
-the Indies, some of the squally weather common in these
-latitudes. Such gusts soon blow over, but are troublesome
-and fatiguing to mariners, and wearing to ship and rigging.
-First comes a black cloud on the horizon, then the waves
-to windward become tipped with whitish foam. Presently
-the gust strikes with great force, the firmament being
-very dark and threatening: at the time of its greatest
-strength there will be a flash of lightning and a thunderclap
-or two, after which a pelt of rain and a sudden clearing
-of the sky, the squall being for that time over.</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile, I often discussed with Wright the question
-of my deliverance. He said that there was now so much
-jealousy between the French and the English, in the West
-Indies, that I could possibly look for no other fate than
-being sold to serve my time as a slave in Tortugas; where
-I would be employed in field labour, such as the cultivation
-of tobacco, great crops of which are grown in that
-island. Wright’s opinion was, that I ought, in some
-way or other, to attempt an escape before being landed
-at Tortugas; but this was easier talked of than done.
-While all was still unsettled between us, ‘Land’ was one
-day proclaimed from the mast-head. This announcement
-surprised us all, for we had not expected to see any land
-until we came in sight of the mountains of Hispaniola,
-which still lay well to the westward. However, we soon
-found that, either through currents or errors in the
-reckoning, we were further to the south than we had calculated,
-and that the island we saw was one of the Virgin
-Isles, forming a cluster just where the long line of windward
-islands which stretch northward from the mainland,
-trend away to the west. This discovery necessitated a
-change in our steering—we hauling up two or three points
-more to the northward. The next day we saw, at a very
-great distance to leeward, a long faint blue ridge rising out
-of the water, which was the mountain line of the high
-ground of Porto Rico. Towards evening, the trade wind
-abated, being influenced, as we conjectured, by the distant
-land-breeze, which blows at night off the shore, in and
-near these islands; and before the setting of the sun the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_20">[Pg 20]</span>
-weather grew wellnigh calm. It was then that one of
-the crew discovered a bottle floating not far from the
-felucca, and pointed it out to the Captain, who straightway
-commanded it to be brought aboard; inasmuch as
-mariners in distress often fling such into the sea, with
-letters and papers relating their sad condition. Now, on
-board the felucca were two boats—the pinnace, in which
-I had been rescued, and a little skiff, not bigger than a
-canoe, which, being hoisted out and manned by two hands,
-brought in the bottle. It turned out to be empty and of
-no account. Still the finding of it was a lucky accident
-for me, inasmuch as the skiff was not again hoisted on
-board, but—the weather being exceedingly fine, and we
-soon expecting to use her to help in mooring ship—left
-towing astern.</p>
-
-<p>That same night, Wright came to me and pointed her
-out as a means of escape.</p>
-
-<p>‘Look you,’ says he, ‘your business is to get ashore on
-some island where you will find Englishmen, and which
-is not entirely under French or Spanish influence. Now,
-on the coast of Hispaniola are not a few of your countrymen
-and mine, sometimes cruizing, sometimes hunting
-and slaughtering cattle. By the course we are now lying,
-we shall have to run all along the northern coast of Hispaniola,
-which we will probably approach close to, for the
-benefit of the land-breeze at night, and because the shore
-is bold and the sea deep. Provided the skiff be left towing
-astern, it will not be difficult for you to smuggle yourself
-into it in the night-time, and so escape ashore.’</p>
-
-<p>This advice appeared to me admirable, and threw me
-quite into a fever of eagerness and anxiety. I was in the
-middle watch that night, and how often I gazed upon the
-little boat—the expected ark of my deliverance—as she
-tossed upon the smooth ridges of swell, which glanced
-like silver in the bright moonlight! About nine o’clock
-in the morning the trade wind resumed its powers, and
-we soon saw rising out of the ocean, upon our lee bow,
-the blue-peaked mountains of Hispaniola. All day, you
-may be sure, I very eagerly watched the weather, fearing<span class="pagenum" id="Page_21">[Pg 21]</span>
-lest the approach of a squall would cause Montbars to
-order the skiff to be taken on deck, but the sky continued
-quite cloudless, the sun was burning hot, and the sea
-breeze—for such amid the Western Indies they call the
-regular daily trade wind—blew most refreshingly upon
-our starboard quarter, urging the felucca gloriously along.
-We were now fast closing in with the coast, which
-stretched in a long high range under the lee; and as we
-approached an exceeding bold promontory, called Le
-Vieux Cap François, I saw how delicious was the land,
-with its bright green forests—its rocks, rising from thick
-bushes and brushwood—and the great blue mountain
-peaks in the distance. Besides ourselves the ocean was
-solitary. No sail scudded before the breeze—no fishing-boat
-rode head to sea, surrounded by the buoys of her nets
-and lines. All above was a sky of dazzling and lustrous
-brightness—beneath was a limpid and foaming sea, from
-which arose the groves and rocks, the deep ravines and
-the green savannahs of an isle which seemed Paradise. I
-stood in the bows of the felucca, and stretched forth my
-arms, and prayed for the moment when I should set foot
-on shore.</p>
-
-<p>When I was in this kind of rapture, Wright came to
-me privately, and asked whether I was determined to
-make the attempt. I replied, I only longed for night to
-come. Then at his request I went below with him to
-his berth, when he showed me, all else being on deck, a
-short-barrelled musket, hid in the bedding, with a flask
-of fine glazed powder and a small bag of balls. There
-was also a leathern bottle, called a broc, well stoppered
-and full of water, and some biscuits. ‘These things,’
-says he, ‘will be necessary for you, so that you may not
-want, until you pick up some comrade along shore.
-Should you not succeed at first, you must trust to your
-gun for food, and you will soon find water, of which
-there is abundance, fresh and clear.’</p>
-
-<p>I thanked him heartily for his goodness and foresight,
-for I had thought of nothing but how I should get ashore,
-not even how I should satisfy my hunger and thirst when<span class="pagenum" id="Page_22">[Pg 22]</span>
-I landed. But Wright was my good genius, and, taking
-advantage of our being now alone, for the deck was so
-much the more pleasant that all were there, he made me
-put on a couple of stout linen shirts which he gave me,
-as also a good jacket, such as sailors wear, and a pair of
-strong yet light shoes, like pumps. I was quite overpowered
-with such goodness, and could scarce refrain
-from weeping. What a poor forlorn miserable creature
-I should have been had Wright not been on board! and
-although I was nothing to him, yet had I been his son,
-the old man could not have used me with more grave
-and simple kindness. I told him that when he first
-spoke to me I was in great desolation and despair of
-spirit, but that now my heart was cheery and buoyant,
-and that I well trusted to see my own land again. At
-this his face darkened, and he heaved a great sigh. I
-went on, and said that he, too, I hoped, would end his
-days, not in these burning climes, but in the green valley
-of Hertfordshire, where he told me he was born.</p>
-
-<p>‘No, no,’ says he, ‘never—never! I shall see England
-no more. I am but a wanderer and an outcast,
-even like Cain of old, and the place that once knew me,
-shall know me no more for ever.’</p>
-
-<p>With this he sat himself down on a great sea-chest,
-and putting his hands to his face, sobbed aloud, so that
-all his great frame was shaken. I was much moved, and
-strove to take his hand. Then he looked at me with his
-large grey eyes, all dry, and, as I thought, somewhat
-bloodshot, for he could not weep, and said, ‘In a churchyard
-there, lie my fathers and my kindred, also the wife
-of my bosom and the two children of my loins, but my
-dust must not mingle with theirs. I shall sleep my last
-sleep in some desert wilderness, or amid the weeds under
-the sea.’</p>
-
-<p>Observing me much astonished, and, perhaps, somewhat
-frightened, for I thought he must have committed
-some great and horrible crime, he grasped my hand in
-his, till I thought the blood came, and said, in a low
-voice—</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_23">[Pg 23]</span></p>
-
-<p>‘Young man, I know not your soul, whether it loveth
-the gauds and the pomps of the world which are but
-vanity, or whether it would walk in the paths which are
-narrow and thorny, but which lead upwards. Yet I do
-believe you to be in spirit true and leal; and wherefore
-then should I dissemble, that if I am an outcast, it is in
-a holy and a just cause—ay, and a cause which will
-triumph, when the blood of the saints which crieth aloud
-is justified and avenged! Leonard Lindsay, I am one of
-those who by voice and hand did to death the man
-Charles Stuart.’</p>
-
-<p>This, then, was one of the regicides whom I had often
-heard were wandering about the world, being driven
-from their land by this great and justifiable deed, for so
-my parents taught me to esteem it, of the putting to
-death of the king. I would have told my friend somewhat
-to this effect, but he stopped me, saying, applause
-or disapprobation were alike to him; that he would help
-and comfort all his fellow-men, but that he cared not for
-their opinion on what he had done, always looking for
-judgment inwards to his own soul, and thence upwards
-to his God.</p>
-
-<p>Shortly after this we went on deck, and my first glance
-was astern, where the skiff was still towing, although the
-waves raised by the sea-breeze ran so gaily, that sometimes
-as they chased us, the boat, rising on the crest of
-the following sea, would seem as though she would be
-hove bodily on deck. The land was now quite close, not
-more than a mile under the lee, so that we could see
-a great succession of bays and little headlands with
-bushes of many sorts, and rich tangled underwood,
-creeping among and clothing the knolls and banks even
-to the water’s edge. Over these, high palms bended and
-waved in the sea-breeze, these seeming to issue from
-every crevice in the rocks; and sometimes, where a rivulet
-came down into the sea, the banks thereof being flat and
-soft, grew great thickets of the mangrove bush, a shrub
-which rises on bare grey stems out of the water, supporting
-whole beds of tangled and intertwisting foliage<span class="pagenum" id="Page_24">[Pg 24]</span>
-above, thus raising, as it were, a sort of canopy above the
-water. Between such places and the rocky headlands
-were often little bays, with narrow strips of white glittering
-beach, running like crescents from cliff to cliff,
-the sea breaking in flashing surf upon the shingle, and
-often sending its spray pelting among the bushes. Never,
-indeed, had I seen a more glorious coast, one so teeming
-with beauty and the riches of an overflowing nature.
-Involuntarily after every long and ardent gaze I turned
-my eyes upon my skiff, praying within my heart that
-nought might come to make my adventure miscarry.</p>
-
-<p>As the evening approached, I was so impatient that I
-disposed of the biscuits, the powder, and the ball about
-my person, and was for ever going below to the berth to
-see that the musket was safe. The mariners, however,
-being excited and joyful, that the end of the voyage was
-nigh, gave little heed to me, otherwise my continued
-movements and feverish demeanour could not have but
-raised suspicion. In those low latitudes there is but
-little twilight, and half an hour after the sun went down
-into the sea ahead of us, the stars were shining out
-through the night. Meantime the sea-breeze had died
-away, and for an hour or longer we were left heaving
-upon the glassy swell, the land showing in vast dusky
-masses which, as it were, cut great spaces out of the
-firmament twinkling with stars, and the roar of the surf
-coming heavy and loud over the sea. Presently, after
-divers faint puffs, which caused the canvas to flap,
-shaking down on the deck great showers of dew, the
-land-wind, or <em>terral</em>, arose in its turn, balmy and sweet
-with the smell of the forests, and our lateen sails being
-dipped, we glided along, leaning over to seaward. The
-mid-watch came at last, and it had not been set for more
-than half an hour, ere the men dropped to sleep, under
-the lee of the bulwarks, excepting the steersman, and he
-leaned heavily and drowsily over the tiller. Then I
-brought on deck the musket and the broc, depositing
-them in safe places. But the question was how to get
-on board the skiff so as to elude the notice of the sailor<span class="pagenum" id="Page_25">[Pg 25]</span>
-who steered. Having soon devised a plan, I communicated
-it to Wright, who did not hesitate to put it into
-execution. Going aft, he stood beside the helmsman,
-and after some time, looking astern, remarked how the
-land-wind broke the usual heave of the sea into wild disorderly
-waves, and then observing that the skiff might be
-injured by being flung under our counter by the jumble
-of the water, he took the rope and hauled the boat
-ahead—the steersman thinking no harm—until he made it
-fast alongside, and screened from sight by the mainsail.
-In five minutes after, with a strong gripe of the hand,
-and a fervent ‘God speed you,’ I swung myself noiselessly
-aboard, and placed the gun and the broc in the
-bottom of the boat. Wright, so I must still call him,
-then undid the rope. My hand was at that moment
-upon the smooth side of the felucca, which I suddenly
-felt slip by me; I was adrift! Holding my breath, and
-my hand still against the planking of the vessel, she
-glided fast and faster by me, eluding as it were my
-clutch, when her shape melted away into the run. A minute
-after and I saw the small dusky hull and white
-stretching canvas becoming indistinct in the darkness
-ahead. I was alone, but I was free. For near an hour I
-remained almost motionless, fearing every moment to hear
-an alarum-gun fire; but the night continued silent, and
-then with a good heart I took up my oars, and using
-two as sculls, rowed towards the coast. The land-breeze
-blew steadily, so I had to tug long and hard. At last,
-seeing the dusky bank close ahead, I paused to look for
-a landing-place, but none could I see. The nature of
-the coast seemed to have changed, the land hereabout
-being a long smooth wall of perpendicular rock, sinking
-sheerly into the sea, which rose and fell at the base, with
-a loud hissing, pouring, gurgling sound—not like the
-deep thunder of surf. I therefore set myself to pull
-eastwardly, in search of a creek or bay. I knew that the
-moon would presently rise over the land, and in sooth, in
-about an hour, I noticed the glow of her broad disc peeping
-over the edge of the cliff ahead of me, and showing it,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_26">[Pg 26]</span>
-fringed, as it were, with a line of bushes and brushwood,
-which curled over the precipice, surmounted now and then
-by one of the tall, bending palmetto trees. In about an
-hour I had moonlight sufficient to see pretty distinctly the
-great limestone ledges along which I was cautiously coasting—pausing
-on my oars, now and then, to hear the great
-buzz of insects and the forlorn cries of night-birds which
-floated from the land. It must have been near three
-o’clock, when I saw a black-like opening in the wall of
-cliff, and very cautiously I pulled my boat inwards. For
-some time I was in great doubt as to whether I had
-found a creek, but presently I beheld the two portals of
-rock between which I was, fairly astern of the boat, and
-saw and heard the white gleam of the surf breaking on
-the beach. But the former was too high for me to risk
-a landing, and I would have pulled out to sea again, but
-seeing another dark shadowy space upon the left, I made
-for it, hoping it might turn out an oblique channel leading
-from the main cove. I was not deceived, and presently
-the boat glided along a sort of dusky canal, with
-great rocks on either hand, clothed with rich creeping
-herbage; trees hanging over either ledge, and, as the
-channel narrowed, meeting, and by their intertwining
-boughs shutting out the blue sky. Below me the water
-showed as black as tar, yet sparkling, when the undulations
-from the outer creek caused it to rise and sink
-upon the bushy banks. Now and then a flutter of
-wings would echo in the narrow passage, and the loud
-shriek of a night-bird would drown the noise. Anon a
-scrambling, walloping sound, followed by a splash, as of
-a great animal scuttling from a ledge into the water,
-would ensue, and again, for a time, there would be deep
-silence. In about a quarter of an hour, the heave of the
-sea was no longer felt, owing, as I concluded, to the shallowing
-of the creek; and then, making fast the skiff to a
-great protruding branch, which I struck my head against,
-I rolled myself in a blanket which I found Wright had
-flung into the boat, and was soon asleep, being thus, as
-it were, safely anchored to the New World!</p>
-
-<hr class="r10">
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_27">[Pg 27]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_III">CHAPTER III.<br><br>
-<span class="fs80">I JOIN A BROTHERHOOD OF HUNTERS AND ADVENTURERS ON THE<br>
-COAST.</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p>I did not wake until the sun was reasonably high,
-although but few rays found their way into the curious
-cove, which by such a lucky chance I had hit. It was,
-indeed, a sort of natural corridor or aisle: rocks covered
-with plants and bushes forming great green walls, with
-tangled trees bending from side to side, and meeting and
-interlacing above, like a roof, while the floor was limpid
-water. The air within this natural alcove was of a
-greenish hue, and the reflection from the water the same.
-Great numbers of gay-coloured birds fluttered and
-screamed, rather than sang, amid the boughs; and on
-almost every projecting stone by the edge of the water
-stood a great grey crane or heron, watching for the small
-fish which form its prey. After I had looked my fill, I
-began to think of breakfast; for, in order to eke out my
-store, I had gone supperless to bed. So I munched a
-couple of biscuits, and took a great pull at the sweet,
-fresh water. There were fruits and vegetables of many
-kinds growing near, which I feared to meddle with, not
-knowing their properties. After breakfast, I cast off
-from my bough, and paddled to and fro in the channel to
-seek a landing-place. This I was not long in discovering,
-at the spot where a little runnel of the most transparent
-water I ever saw in my life came trickling down in a
-small hollow, or what, in Scotland, we would call a <em>scaur</em>.
-The sides of the ravine were, it is true, very steep, but
-they were clothed with matted grass and vegetation, so
-that I could clamber up without much difficulty. I
-therefore made my boat fast very carefully, for I knew
-not what use she might be to me afterwards, and also
-loaded my gun and hammered the flint, after which I
-addressed myself to climb to the top of the bank. I
-found this tolerably hard work; the heat of the sun was excessive,
-and here there was no sea-breeze to refresh one.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_28">[Pg 28]</span>
-Moreover, I did not much like the infinity of creeping and
-crawling things which, as I made my way upwards, I
-startled amid the coarse grass and underwood. Great
-beetles, shining and speckled—writhing creatures, like
-grey worms, with numberless legs—horrible hairy spiders—and
-one or two small snakes, all mottled and brindled.
-Besides, there flew about me, making a tiny buzz, as if
-they blew small hairy trumpets, hosts of that accursed
-fly called by the French maranguinnes, and by the English
-mosquitos, which stung me until I was almost mad,—slapping
-my face and my hands, and thrashing the
-air with a leafy branch, but all in vain. At length,
-after great toil, I stood upon the top of the bank, and
-felt, to my joy, the cool blast of the strong sea-breeze,
-which rustled in the bushes, and soon blew away my
-insect enemies far to leeward. Then, mounting a moderate-sized
-eminence, I set myself to reconnoitre; and
-truly I might have deemed that I was in a desert and
-unpeopled land. Behind me rose great swelling ridges,
-extending above one another as far as my eye could
-reach, and all covered with bright green brushwood, with
-here and there one of the long feathery palm-trees standing
-up like a steeple over houses. Not many paces in
-front ran a long fringe, as it were, of waving trees and
-bushes, marking the extreme edge of the cliff, which
-sank into the ocean; while beyond this there stretched
-out the great blue expanse of the sea, speckled here and
-there with white, as the waves broke, but sailless, and
-as lonely as the land. The great mountains which we
-had seen from on board were here invisible, and even the
-ridges around, as I gazed on them, seemed to move and
-quiver in the great heat. Notwithstanding pretty humming-birds,
-less than Jenny Wrens, fluttered about, and
-there was a mighty chattering, as of armies of parrots
-and parroquets, which whooped and called to each other
-from grove to grove.</p>
-
-<p>At first, I felt a kind of sinking at being alone in this
-great wilderness, but plucking up courage, I set off to
-trudge along the coast to the eastward. The journey<span class="pagenum" id="Page_29">[Pg 29]</span>
-was toilsome in the extreme, for the stunted shrubs were
-tangled so, that I was ofttimes compelled to cut a passage
-with my clasp-knife, and the heat made my temples
-throb and ache strangely. At length, seeing great trees
-of prodigious size, the skirts of a forest, on my right
-hand, I made for them, and entering their shade, found
-better walking, for here was a canopy of leaves which
-warded off the sun, and also prevented the growth of
-underwood, the ground being clear, and the air cool, between
-the vast trunks of these glorious trees. However,
-I kept upon the edge of the wood, for fear of losing myself,
-not designing to stray far from the sea. Having
-marched thus near two hours, I heard a noise, which, as
-I came nearer, I took to be the yellings of wild animals;
-so that, somewhat startled, I looked to the priming of
-my gun, and also gazed around for a tree into which it
-might be convenient to climb. Meantime, the tumult
-came nearer, and I imagined it to be of dogs, yet it was
-rather a savage yelping than the deep bay of hounds.
-Next I heard a great crashing of branches on the edge of
-the wood, and making my way there, and mounting a
-tree, I speedily saw a huge wild boar, as I judged, with
-great tusks, and his jaws covered with flakes of foam,
-closely chased by a pack of dogs. These latter were
-fawn-coloured, with black muzzles; their legs were short,
-but very brawny; and as I heard no sound or shout of
-hunters, I concluded, with reason, that the pack before
-me were descendants of those ferocious bloodhounds
-brought by the Spaniards into Hispaniola, and other
-islands, to hunt down the inoffensive Indians, and which,
-being deserted by their masters, ran wild and multiplied,
-so that flocks of them assemble, and hunt the cattle and
-boars for their own support. Meantime, however, the
-quarry had turned to bay underneath a tree not far from
-me, and the dogs stood round in a semicircle, yelping at
-him. At length, one bolder than the rest made a spring,
-and drove his great jaws, as it seemed to me, into the
-animal’s flank. This was the signal for a general onset,
-and, in a moment, the boar, grunting and squeeling<span class="pagenum" id="Page_30">[Pg 30]</span>
-hideously, was tumbled on the ground, the ferocious
-dogs, with jaws and muzzles all blood and froth, tearing
-and riving its living flesh, so that, in the space of a very
-few minutes, the creature was not only killed, but well-nigh
-pulled into morsels. Then the dogs, several of which
-were hurt, and limped and whined, fell to and ate their
-fill, after which having gorged themselves to their very
-throats, they lay down to sleep. Seeing this, I concluded
-that I could with safety pursue my journey, and accordingly
-got down from the tree and did so, none of the
-bloodhounds molesting me.</p>
-
-<p>I walked until the afternoon, still seeing no sign of
-human life, and then feeling very hungry, and moreover
-wishing for something more savoury than bread and
-water, I looked about for game. Many green lizards or
-guanos were to be seen in the branches, and these the
-Frenchmen on board the felucca had assured me were
-good food, but I could not bring my stomach to them,
-and at length, after several unsuccessful shots, I secured
-a bird, nearly double the size of our pigeon, on which I
-determined to dine. Coming to a little rivulet of clear
-water, with pretty pools, nourishing the most luscious
-profusion of water-plants, I sat me down, and presently
-discovered a large duck quackling and nibbling in the
-herbage. Now, the flesh of a duck I knew, but the bird
-I had already killed was a stranger to me; so taking a
-very careful aim at the poor fellow, I fired and sent the
-bullet—I had no small shot—right through him. But
-immediately there rose such a loud rustling of wings,
-and quacking, and screaming, that I was confounded, until,
-making a few steps in advance, I saw that the rivulet a
-little above spread into a good-sized weedy pond, which
-harboured thousands of ducks, and teal, and widgeon, all
-of which flew away on hearing the report of my piece.
-Having recovered my game from the water, I set to
-work, plucked him, and, kindling a fire of dry sticks and
-leaves, broiled him thereon. The cookery was rough,
-but I thought the fare capital, only the want of salt
-annoyed me. Having dined, I jogged on as before, and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_31">[Pg 31]</span>
-as evening approached found myself exceedingly fatigued
-and dispirited at having seen no human being. When
-the sun went down and the short tropical twilight gave
-way to night, through which the stars blazed with a fiery
-lustre, unknown to me until I had crossed the Atlantic,
-I even began to ponder as to whether I had done well in
-leaving the ship at all; but speedily shaking off this idle
-despondency, I wrapped myself up in my blanket, which,
-in spite of its weight, I had carried strapped tightly on
-my shoulders, and seasoning my biscuit with a piece of
-tobacco to chew, made my supper, and slept in the fork
-of a tree, lying back not uncomfortably among the
-branches. I awoke once or twice and listened to the
-low hum and drone of insects, in addition to which a
-bird, as I judged, uttered from time to time a long
-mournful cry, sounding like ‘Weep, poor weel,’ which
-was very melancholy, echoing through that great midnight
-wilderness. Around me gleamed the little lights
-of glow-worms, called by the Spaniards <em>Moscas del Fuego</em>.
-But these extinguished their lamps in the latter part of
-the night.</p>
-
-<p>I was awake with the sun, at the rising of which a
-great white fog which lay upon the earth and drenched
-me, lifted and dispersed. The heat soon dried my
-clothes, and about nine o’clock, when the sea-breeze
-whistled through the herbage, I began again my weary
-march. Not long after, having a good view of the sea
-from a promontory, I descried almost beneath me, a ship
-under sail, lying along shore, which, the coast here tending
-southerly, she could do very well, and yet keep her
-sails full. She was a two-masted vessel, seemingly very
-quick, and, plunging over the breasting waves gallantly,
-soon passed me, steering to the east and keeping fearlessly
-along the rocks. I found no wild ducks to-day,
-but, urged by hunger, I shot a monkey; and although
-the poor creature looked horrible when skinned, his flesh
-was not unpalatable. Towards the afternoon, I perceived
-that I was approaching an indented part of the coast, and
-I saw many ravines down which I could have gone to the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_32">[Pg 32]</span>
-sea. Now and then, too, I would get a glimpse of such
-pretty, shingly and bushy bays as I descried from the
-felucca, while on the other hand, between the hills, there
-opened up vistas of great flat green fields, here called
-savannahs. I had hopes that I was approaching some
-inhabited place, and ere long I heard faint shouts before
-me and nearer to the sea. This made me push on
-vigorously, yet not without caution; and at length,
-forcing my way through a forest of stunted trees, I
-caught a glimpse of the figure of a man through the
-boughs. His back was to me, and I thought he was
-standing in a low tree, when suddenly a great gust of
-the sea-breeze came rattling in the wood, and the man
-swang to and fro with a slow motion, among the waving
-branches. Immediately a horrid thought seized me, and
-looking up as I heard a croaking, I saw two great carrion
-vultures circling in the air. Manning myself, I ran
-forward, and there, sure enough, was the body of a man
-hanging from a horizontal branch of a tree, his feet not
-many inches from the tops of the Guinea grass. I was
-overpowered with horror; but turning away from the
-terrible sight, what were my feelings to see two other
-bodies hanging in a similar manner! Having a little
-recovered my first natural fright, I looked attentively at
-these unfortunates. They were all three dressed in the
-same fashion, with coarse shirts, great jackets or doublets,
-cut in a square fashion, like the coats of the water-men
-on the Thames, and pantaloons. What surprised
-me, however, was the red filthy hue of the garments, as
-though they had been soaked in blood, and never cleaned
-or scoured. But then I called to mind what Wright
-had told me of the hunting dresses of the Buccaneers,
-and how they took a sort of pride in being disorderly and
-neglectful of their attire, never washing it from the
-blood-stains which their occupation plenteously bedaubs
-them with. The hair and beards of these men were long
-and matted, and they wore buskins of untanned hide. I
-looked attentively, but could see no gun or weapon, and
-the whole matter was a mystery to me. However, it<span class="pagenum" id="Page_33">[Pg 33]</span>
-was not a pleasant locality to linger in, so I continued
-my way, and presently saw a fine wooded bay, with
-winding shores, lying beneath me, the forest sometimes
-reaching into the very surf, but in other places leaving
-beaches of sand, carpeted as it were with a sort of
-creeping grass of the kind, as I afterwards heard, called
-Bahama.</p>
-
-<p>Along this bay I skirted, often stopping to look keenly
-about. At length I saw a boat or canoe, pulled by
-several persons, paddling across the smooth surface; and
-observing it disappear beyond a green headland on the
-opposite side of the bay, my attention was directed
-thither, and presently I noticed several columns of thin
-blue smoke rising up above the trees at that very point.
-I was still gazing at them when the sound of voices
-smote my ear distinctly, and I had scarce time to conceal
-myself among the thick brushwood, when near a score of
-men, some of whom wore gold-laced doublets and seemed
-officers, came scrambling down towards the water from a
-point higher up the bay than I had attained. I saw at
-a glance that they were not Englishmen, being much too
-swarthy; and as they passed at no great distance, and
-talked and laughed loudly, I perceived that their language
-was Spanish, the sound and accent whereof I knew
-very well. All these men were armed, each with a great
-bell-mouthed short-barrelled gun, but I observed that
-three carried, each of them, in addition, a musket of
-quite another shape. Seeing that they were Spaniards, I
-was in mortal dread that they might have bloodhounds
-with them, fiercer even than the wild dogs I had seen,
-and I drew my strong clasp-knife, determined that, at
-least, there should be a weasen or so cut before I was
-worried. Happily, however, the party had no dogs whatever.
-I held my breath as they were passing, but what
-was my consternation when the whole body stopped not
-ten paces from me, while one pointed out to the others
-the smoke on the other side of the bay. At this, two or
-three other of the fellows made gestures, by jerking their
-heads aside and pointing to their necks, as though there<span class="pagenum" id="Page_34">[Pg 34]</span>
-were halters round them, and then all laughed. But he
-who seemed the principal officer restrained them, and
-taking out a pocket compass, appeared to set, as mariners
-call it, the direction in which the smoke appeared. Then
-they all went on together, I cautiously following at a
-very respectful distance. Their course was to the outer
-part of the bay, and they proceeded hastily down a steep
-wooded glen, in which I lost sight of them. Presently,
-however, I heard them hailing a ship, as I conjectured;
-and I was right, for having got a little further, I heard
-the ripple of water, and saw over the trees the rigging
-and masts of a vessel, which I recognised as the same
-I had descried at sea early in the morning; and, getting
-a good vantage-ground, I at last looked down upon her
-deck, and saw a well-armed ship, full of men. Putting
-all these circumstances together, I soon concluded that
-the craft was a Spanish Guarda Costa. Then I thought
-of the men pointing to the distant smoke, and making
-motions as though they would hang the people there. In
-a moment I saw it all. The three executed Buccaneers—the
-three guns different from the rest carried by the
-Spaniards—their gestures at sight of the smoke of a little
-settlement! Doubtless the party belonged to a ship
-which had come upon the coast to make the usual attacks
-on the French and English settlers, and they, having
-caught these three unfortunates in the woods, had hanged
-them out of hand, and meant to attack the people on the
-opposite side of the bay, taking them by surprise. This
-last I inferred from the care with which a sheltering cove
-had been found to conceal their vessel.</p>
-
-<p>It was now my clear duty to make my way to the
-opposite side of the bay, to warn the people there, who,
-being enemies of the Spaniards, must necessarily, by the
-rule of these seas, be friends of mine. But how to get
-to them? I knew not how far up the country the bay,
-or lagoon, extended; to swim across would not have been
-difficult, but I thought of caymans and sharks, and my
-heart failed me. Notwithstanding, I made my way to
-the seaside, and sat down on a large rock. What would<span class="pagenum" id="Page_35">[Pg 35]</span>
-I have given now for the skiff I had abandoned! But
-then, if I had come along the coast in her, I should have
-been picked up and murdered by the Guarda Costa. So
-in cruel perplexity I sat until it grew dark. All at once
-I thought that if the three unhappy Buccaneers who
-were put to death belonged to the settlement opposite,
-that they would have brought a canoe to waft them over,
-which I might find along the shore. This idea gave me
-fresh vigour, and I ran eagerly along the shingle, climbing
-from time to time over points of rock which jutted
-out. Near two hours were wasted in fruitless search,
-wading through little creeks, and tracing small channels
-amid the bushes into which the rising tide was flowing,
-when at length, just as I was despairing, I happily found
-the object of my search. In a narrow cove, alongside a
-ledge of rock, floated a light canoe, scooped out of a
-single tree. I immediately stepped on board, and using
-the paddle alternately on either side, managed, though
-I was awkward at first, to make the canoe move in the
-direction I wished. Crossing the bay, I had enough to
-do to keep the land wind from blowing me out of my
-course, and by the time I was two-thirds over, every
-muscle in my body ached with the unwonted exercise.
-Paddling on, however, I suddenly saw on the dusky
-shore a cluster of red dim lights, by which I knew that I
-had opened the headland behind which the smoke rose,
-and almost at the same moment I heard behind a faint
-plash, and the rattle as of arms. I saw at once that I
-had no time to lose, if, as I guessed, the boats of the
-Guarda Costa were not far astern. Immediately I redoubled
-my efforts, making for the lights, and at the
-same time hailed, ‘Ho! the shore, ahoy.’ Immediately
-a voice replied, ‘Is that you, Benjamin?’ When I
-heard the sounds of my own language, my heart leaped
-to my mouth; and, catching up my musket, I fired it off,
-shouting, ‘Look out! look out! the Spaniards! the Guarda
-Costa!’ In an instant there gleamed a great many little
-lights, as of lanterns carried by people running about on
-the beach, and I heard the clash of arms and loud hallooings;<span class="pagenum" id="Page_36">[Pg 36]</span>
-then the voice I had heard sang out again, ‘Where
-are they?—who are you?’ But before I could reply
-the Spaniards suddenly fired two volleys in my direction,
-the flashes showing two great boats, full of men, and
-rowing fast. The water near me was torn up by the
-balls, but none touched the canoe, and the fire was
-promptly answered by a small piece of artillery ashore,
-which echoed grandly in the hills, and caused a harsh
-concert of the wakened birds. Not willing to be between
-two fires, I paddled hard, and presently ran the canoe
-on the beach; when I leaped out and found myself in the
-midst of a group of men, all shouting and cheering in
-English and French, running to and fro, and fetching
-and making ready arms,—their muskets, and hangers,
-and pikeheads gleaming in the sparkle of the lanterns.
-Directly I splashed through the surf, I shouted that I
-was a friend and a Scottish sailor, and that the Spaniards
-were upon us; whereon they gave a loud shout in my
-honour, and in defiance of the enemy, and fired a straggling
-volley. This the boats returned briskly, and the
-Buccaneers, rushing up to their middles in the sea, cried
-out with desperate imprecations to the Spaniards to come
-on, swearing they would roast them alive on their <em>grilles
-de bois</em>, and taunting them with every infamous name,
-keeping up a spattering irregular fire all the time. However,
-Jack Spaniard, seeing a warm reception before him,
-hung off, keeping in the shadow of the little headland.
-Then two or three canoes were promptly manned, but
-the men in their eagerness over-crowded them, and fought
-amongst themselves who should go; so that time was
-lost, and meantime we heard the dash of oars, as the
-boats, having failed in their purpose of surprise, pulled
-away.</p>
-
-<p>When the hubbub was a little abated, I was asked by
-a dozen persons at once what I was; whereon I recounted
-that having left, I did not say escaped, from a French
-ship on the coast, I had travelled hither, and on my way
-saw the Spaniards, and guessed their intentions. Then I
-told them of the bodies I had passed hanging from trees,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_37">[Pg 37]</span>
-at which they raised a great clamour of cursing; for these,
-as I had guessed, were their comrades, who had crossed
-the bay to hunt the day before. Then there was a proposal
-to man all the canoes, and go and attack the Spaniards;
-but just as this was acceded to with a loud shout,
-a light pirogue, which it seems had been fishing down the
-bay, ran in with the news that the ship had weighed
-anchor directly her boats returned, and made all sail to
-sea. On this there was a great groan given for the
-cowardice of the Don, and the crowd began to disperse.</p>
-
-<p>At this moment a young Englishman came up to me,
-and asked, with great solicitude, if one of the Buccaneers
-I had seen hanging was light haired with yellow moustaches.
-I replied in the affirmative; on which, in words
-of strong passion and feeling, he swore that he would
-bitterly revenge on the Spaniards the death of Benjamin,
-his ‘partner,’ as he called him, and, in short, broke out
-into a great paroxysm of grief and rage. Meantime,
-several of the Buccaneers offered me the hospitality of
-their huts, but my Englishman declared I must go to his,
-as he was now alone, which the rest consenting to, very
-cordially shook hands with me, and thanked me in
-French and English, and then I followed my new friend
-along the beach to his hut. There were a good many of
-these, irregularly placed, and beside several there
-smouldered a slow fire, making the lights I had seen in
-the bay. Over these fires there were gratings or hurdles
-of wood, and on them lumps of beef, rudely cut, drying
-and cooking little by little; great bales and heaps of
-hides lay about, the perfume exhaling from them not
-being by any means pleasant, and numbers of dogs howled
-and barked without ceasing. My conductor led me
-into a hut built like the others, of wood and clay, and
-thatched with some sort of thick leaf. The inside was
-lighted by a smoky lamp, showing two beds of hide with
-dirty blankets, and a clumsy table. There were shelves
-all round, whereon were ranged several guns, hangers, and
-long Spanish knives, with fish and boar-spears, and other
-weapons. Also I saw a mariner’s compass and some<span class="pagenum" id="Page_38">[Pg 38]</span>
-instruments for taking the latitude, so that I rightly
-guessed my host to be a sailor as well as a hunter.
-Besides these, there were strewn about, bits of net, canvas,
-bullock horns, and one or two panthers’ skins were
-arranged as coverlets for the beds.</p>
-
-<p>My host asked many questions about the Spaniards,
-while he produced for supper a piece of dried beef, prepared
-over the slow fire which I had seen, and which
-being called ‘boucan’ gave to those who make it the
-name of ‘Buccaneers.’ I found it somewhat tough, but
-relishing and wholesome. After supper, we had brandy
-and rum, tempered by water, and while drinking it very
-sociably, my comrade informed me that he was a native
-of Cornwall, and that his name was Treveltham; but
-that here, following a custom which was universal among
-the Buccaneers, he had changed it for a nickname, or
-<em>nomme de guerre</em>, by which only he was known to the
-generality of his comrades. His Christian appellation
-being Nicholas, he was called Nicky Hamstring, a whimsical
-appellation, which set me laughing heartily. He
-had been on the coast since the end of the last rainy
-season, and liked the life well. The bay on the banks of
-which we were, he told me, was the estuary of a river
-called Le Marmousette, and about it there were much
-wild cattle. The English and the French Buccaneers
-lived here generally good friends. ‘Not but,’ said he,
-‘that sometimes when the rum has gone round, there is
-not a brawl, and it may be a stick with a knife; but after
-all the island is big enough for all, and the cattle are
-many enough for all, and so we love each other, and hate
-Jack Spaniard.’ While we were talking, we heard loud
-shouting and singing without, great roaring choruses
-both in French and English, and oftimes a Lingua
-Franca, which was a compound of the two, but the
-burden of all being words of hatred and contempt of the
-Spaniards. Once or twice I thought the singers would
-have entered our hut, for the door had neither lock nor
-bar, but they did not, and as the night wore on, everything
-became silent except the dogs, who, having been<span class="pagenum" id="Page_39">[Pg 39]</span>
-unloosed from their kennels to act as sentinels, growled
-hoarsely along the beach. Having drunk and talked as
-much as we chose, we went to bed, I having, indeed, been
-asleep all through several long stories which Nicky recounted
-of the exploits and bravery of the Buccaneers,
-my drowsiness being easily excused to my companion
-by the long journey I had come that day.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="r10">
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_IV">CHAPTER IV.<br><br>
-<span class="fs80">OF THE LIFE OF A BUCCANEER.</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p>Next morning Nicky asked me to accompany him, with
-two others to guide them to the spot where their comrades
-had suffered, in order that they might bury the
-bodies; we accordingly set off in the canoe, our companions
-being one Jonas, as he was called, an Englishman,
-and Pierre le Noir, or Black Peter, a Frenchman from
-the coast of Normandy. Jonas was so called, owing to
-the great ill-luck which he had met with in cruising,
-having been twice taken, and once very nearly hanged by
-the Spaniards on the coast of Porto Rico; while once
-upon the Mosquito coast, in the expedition in which
-l’Olonnais, a famous French Buccaneer, was killed, he had
-been left for some months in a small quay or island near
-the Mosquito shore, eating what wild fruit he could get,
-and what birds he could catch with his hands. We landed
-in the same creek in which I found the canoe, and after less
-troublous walking than I expected, my comrades knowing
-the country, found the bodies still hanging, but already
-defaced by the hideous vultures, so as to present a horrid
-spectacle. Nevertheless, having brought shovels and
-pickaxes with us, we performed our task, and over the
-grave, for they all three were laid in one, we put a rude
-cross made of withies, or willow wands, and so left them
-to take their long sleep in the wilderness.</p>
-
-<p>Being returned to the opposite side, I rambled through<span class="pagenum" id="Page_40">[Pg 40]</span>
-the village, for such it was, to note the appearance of the
-place, and its inhabitants.</p>
-
-<p>The huts were built upon a green bank, rising pleasantly
-from the sea, the little headland of which I spoke
-sheltering it. Behind some lofty ridges, partly covered
-with luxuriant wood, which here and there had been
-cleared, certain small fields were marked out, these last
-being planted with a brown herb, like overgrown rhubarb,
-which they told me was tobacco. At the water’s edge
-was a rude wharf, made of wood called shingles—and
-several canoes and European-built boats lay there. While
-I was sauntering about, one of the former put off, navigated
-by two Indians, who spoke both French and
-English reasonably well. These Indians were better and
-more neatly attired than the whites; they were of a sallow-brown
-hue, had long, lank black hair, and very bright
-eyes. In person they were tall, raw-boned, and muscular.
-In the canoe they carried an assortment, as it were, of
-spears, called fizgigs and harpoons, for striking fish; at
-which exercise they are inconceivably expert, often killing
-in a forenoon what will form a good dinner for a hundred
-men. The Mosquito men, for so are these Indians called,
-are therefore very highly prized by the whites, who give
-them good wages to go on board their ships, or to stay at
-their settlements on shore, to provide turtle or manatee
-for the company. While I was looking at them, Nicky
-came up to me, and we walked through the village together,
-he bringing me into many of the cabins, all of
-which were similar to his own. Those of the men who
-were not in the mountains or savannahs hunting, were
-attending to their boucans, or fires, for the drying of the
-meat, and I thought as I saw them, working like butchers
-and cooks, that I would rather take the huntsman’s part
-of the business. All around lay the quarters of slaughtered
-beeves and hogs, while the Buccaneers, armed with
-long knives, cut the flesh from the bones. These lumps
-were then carefully salted in open sheds used for that
-purpose, and after being well steeped in brine, were
-placed on the boucan—that is to say, upon the grille of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_41">[Pg 41]</span>
-wood above a slow fire, which gradually dried and cooked
-the meat, giving it at the same time a sort of smoky taste,
-which however is not without an aroma to the palate.
-This method of preserving meat may be called national in
-these islands, for so did the original Charibs dress their
-food, whether fish or flesh. These savages were so fond
-of this cookery, and of such endurance, that an Indian
-returning from the chase, fatigued and hungry, would
-often wait patiently by the boucan, or as they called it,
-the <em>barbecu</em>, the best part of a day, until a fish or slice of
-hog, or beeve, was well cooked, the morsel being suspended
-almost two feet above a little and slow fire. The Charibs,
-being cannibals, were often in use to treat their prisoners
-just as they treated their game, and I know many who,
-visiting some of the smaller windward islands, and also
-the Brazilian coast, saw great flitches of human flesh,
-smoked and barbecued, hanging in the huts. The meat,
-when sufficiently preserved in the manner which I
-have described, the Buccaneers placed in storehouses,
-built so that both land and sea winds may play well
-around them. The hides are also prepared in a rude
-fashion, and the tallow, the whole being periodically sold,
-either for money or goods, to the captains of privateers
-for their crews, or to certain planters in those islands in
-which cattle do not abound. The latter are the best customers,
-making regular contracts with the Buccaneers for
-the supply of a certain quantity of meat and hides for a
-fixed sum, the stipulations on both sides being honourably
-adhered to. Many of the Buccaneers have servants
-and hired assistants, who are chiefly employed in conveying
-the cattle from the spot where they are killed to the
-boucan, and afterwards in helping to stow away the food.
-Although this appeared to be a regular settlement, its inhabitants
-led but a roving life. Many of them intended to
-go to sea for a change at the first opportunity, and others,
-conceiving that there were more cattle and fewer hunters
-to the eastward, spoke of shifting their quarters. This I
-heard while wandering about with Nicky, from boucan
-to boucan, and hut to hut. The scene indeed was a new<span class="pagenum" id="Page_42">[Pg 42]</span>
-one to me. Such groups of wild-looking blood-stained
-men; such slashing and cutting of meat, as though one
-were in the shambles; such shouting and singing in different
-tongues, mixed with the clamour of dogs and the
-screams of parrots, and other birds from the neighbouring
-groves; such quaffing of bumpers of brandy and
-constant smoking of tobacco; such an appearance indeed
-of rude plenty and coarse health and enjoyment—all this
-made a curious impression on me, and I returned to the
-hut pondering on it.</p>
-
-<p>‘Well,’ says Nicky, ‘will you stay with us, and be
-my comrade, in lieu of poor Benjamin? Here is his stock
-in trade,’ pointing to two good guns and a little assortment
-of household stuff. ‘By the rules of the coast, as
-you know, we all work in couples. Each man has his
-comrade, with whom he shares all: and when one dies,
-the survivor is entitled to his partner’s wealth and implements—the
-last of which I will very willingly bestow
-upon you, should you deem it meet to join me.’</p>
-
-<p>We talked for some time about the matter. My own
-mind was naturally buoyant, and my spirits easily fitted
-themselves to circumstances; and so, concluding that I
-would lead an adventurous life, and see much well worthy
-of being beheld, we in the end concluded a bargain; and
-then putting on a doublet which had belonged to poor Benjamin,
-and which being almost new, was but slightly
-smirched with blood, my partner summoned in several of
-the chief men to the hut; and they being accommodated
-with great goblets of brandy, admitted me by acclamation
-into the body of the brave Huntsmen and Buccaneers, and
-the ancient order of Brethren of the Coast, baptizing me in
-brandy, with various mummeries, by the nick-name of Will
-Thistle, as showing my Scottish nativity. Then Jonas,
-who was there, would fain have had a carouse, but they
-persuaded him not, saying that there was ample work to
-do, and little time to do it in, before the ships would
-arrive from Jamaica and Nevis for boucan.</p>
-
-<p>Behold me now, therefore, a Buccaneer on the coast of
-Hispaniola! I let my beard and moustache grow, and they<span class="pagenum" id="Page_43">[Pg 43]</span>
-and my hair, which was naturally luxuriant, mingling, I
-speedily looked as grim and grisly as any of them. My
-comrade, Nicky, was a good man and true; he had really
-felt the death of Benjamin his partner, and so had been
-at first more grave and more reserved than usual. But
-as this natural feeling wore away, he became truly a
-merry madcap, with a jest, sometimes of the coarsest, or
-a lusty sea-song, or a tale of brave privateersmen, ever in
-his mouth. Under his tuition, I soon became a good
-shot, and learned to break up a bull or cow most scientifically
-with the knife. Also I became acquainted with
-the various trees and shrubs, birds and beasts of the coast.
-I knew how to fell the mountain cabbage, and to roast
-the savoury plantain in the hot cinders. I could bake
-the mealy cassava cake, and I knew how to bore the
-Frank palm for the luscious sap which flows from the
-wounded bark. Besides, these great forests and fair
-beaches teem with infinite food. We turned the lazy
-turtles which we found upon the shore, or hunted for
-their eggs in the hot sand. We intercepted and roasted
-the land-crab in his annual journey from the mountains;
-we shot the guano or yellow lizard, as he whimpered in
-the boughs, and prejudice being set aside, found his
-flesh like that of a barn-door fowl; while the racoon and
-the monkey both formed good roasts when we tired of
-pork and beef. Then on every pond bred flocks of fat
-ducks, and, in the season, the delicious ortolan fed
-amid the guinea grass. Great hosts of pigeons built in
-the high trees and the rocks, and the bright-coloured
-woodpeckers afforded us many a savoury dish. For the
-sea, the Mosquito men kept us well supplied. Standing
-in the bows of the canoe, with their barbed spears poised
-and ready, and their keen eyes fixed upon the water
-beneath, there was hardly a fish at which they darted
-their harpoons which the next moment lay not quivering
-and bleeding in the bottom of the boat.</p>
-
-<hr class="r10">
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_44">[Pg 44]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_V">CHAPTER V.<br><br>
-<span class="fs80">HOW WE ENCOUNTER GREAT DANGERS, THE SPANIARDS<br>
-ATTACKING US.</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p>I have said that the bay on which we lived was part of
-the mouth or estuary of the river Marmousette, which,
-rising in distant mountains, falls into the sea, between
-Port Plate, a great land-bound gulf, and a high cape
-called Point de Cas Rouge. A mile or so further up the
-country than the Buccaneer settlement, the coast was
-low and marshy; the mangroves here grew in great
-abundance, and divers deep channels of salt water ran
-away from the main branch of the sea, and led, some of
-them, to great open savannahs, covered with rich grass,
-where the wild cattle loved to come and feed. One day,
-five of us started in a small pirogue, which could barely
-contain such a crew, to seek for bulls and cows in these
-swampy prairies—a Buccaneer called Walshe, who perfectly
-knew the mangrove canals, acting as pilot. We
-paddled up alongside of the bank, and having come to the
-swampy ground, directed the canoe through certain intricate
-channels in the forest of mangroves, with the intent
-of coming to a bit of the savannah favourable for our sport,
-which Walshe knew. It was curious, thus rowing, as it
-were, through a submerged forest. The water beneath us
-was very deep—for we were obliged to keep in the channels
-by reason of the mangroves growing on the muddy banks—and
-quite transparent, so long as the fat black slime
-remained undisturbed. Over head, the mangroves formed
-a complete canopy, so that we paddled in a hot green
-twilight, looking through long vistas of this natural
-alcove, or else trying in vain to make our eyesight penetrate
-more than a few yards athwart the infinity of grey,
-slimy stems. At this time, the tide was flowing inward,
-floating alongside of us broad layers of thick, rich scum,
-which gradually, as it were, clung to the trees on either
-side, leaving the mid-passage clear.</p>
-
-<p>I, happening to be in the bow of the canoe as look-out<span class="pagenum" id="Page_45">[Pg 45]</span>
-man, amused myself by gazing down into the green,
-translucent sea, ahead of the ripples caused by the progress
-of the canoe. The channel could not have been
-less than three fathoms deep, yet I saw, as clearly as
-though there were nothing but air beneath me, the broad,
-moving leaves of great plants at the bottom, and the
-heaps, and coils, and meshes of twisted stalks, and
-long, serpent-like withes springing from the fat mud,
-and which waved with a slow and sickly motion as the
-passing tide stirred them. There were also great shoals
-of fish of divers kinds, which fled away on all sides as we
-advanced; but what fascinated my gaze was the appearance
-of a huge blue shark, which I could distinctly see
-cleaving the water about half way between the boat’s
-keel and the bottom, and keeping pace with us very
-exactly. I was in the very act of raising my head to tell
-what I had seen, when I heard a loud exclamation from
-Walshe, who was steering, and who exclaimed that there
-was a rope stretched across the passage. The words
-were hardly out of his mouth, when the canoe struck the
-obstacle, broached to with the swing of the tide, and in
-an instant turned over, tilting us all, with a huge splash,
-into the water. As I went souse into the sea, the vision
-of the horrible monster which I had just seen shot
-through my very heart and brain, and striking out with
-convulsive strokes, in a moment I clutched a mangrove
-stem, and then, almost unknowing how I did it, I swung
-myself into the tree. Turning round, I looked for my
-companions; two were clinging to the canoe, which was
-drifting rapidly away with the tide. Nicky, my comrade,
-was in a similar position to myself, but on the opposite
-side of the creek; but poor Walshe was struggling in
-mid-channel, vainly trying, in his flurry, to swim against
-tide. We both shouted to him to sheer to one side; but
-just as he was attempting to do so, I saw a bluish white
-glimmer shoot through the troubled water beneath him,
-and at that moment, the poor fellow gave such an unearthly
-yell, that the woods echoed, flinging his arms
-about, and dashing the water into a foam, in the midst of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_46">[Pg 46]</span>
-which he disappeared, his cry ending in a loud, choking
-gurgle. Then there rose and rolled a great smooth,
-boiling wave, tinged with blood, as the shark, having
-secured his prey, turned again on his belly, and dived
-into the deep water. Nicky and I sat looking at each
-other for near the space of ten minutes without uttering
-a syllable. Then we began, I know not why, to talk in
-low whispers, and to consult upon our own situation.
-Our hope was, that the two hunters, who had stuck by
-the canoe, would be able to right it, and return for us,
-and so, joining our voices, we shouted loud and long, but
-the only answer which came back was the clamour of
-parrots and other birds, and the hissing sound of the
-water pouring between the slimy mangrove stems. We
-had no fire-arms, they having gone to the bottom when
-the canoe upset; so, having shouted ourselves hoarse, we
-had nothing for it but painfully to converse with each
-other. Our discourse turned upon the cause of our
-mishap. The rope was, by this time, far beneath the
-water, but we could observe the tremor of the two
-stout mangroves to which it was attached. It was
-Nicky’s opinion that there were Spaniards upon the
-coast, and that we had fallen into one of their traps—they
-being aware that we sometimes used these canals to
-paddle to the savannahs, and return with the ebb of the
-tide. ‘If so,’ said my comrade, ‘we shall not be left
-long here, and shall come by a fate not much better than
-that of poor Sam Walshe.’ I inquired if there was no
-hope of escape at low water, when we might wade
-through the water to firm ground; but my comrade
-replied, that unless we were giants, we could hope nothing
-from that. Neither would it be practicable to
-clamber shorewards from tree to tree, on account of the
-great multiplicity of canals and passages which traverse
-the mangroves, the smaller of which harboured caymans
-in their muddy depths. ‘No, no,’ concluded Nicky, ‘we
-can do nothing; we must wait and take our chance.’</p>
-
-<p>Presently the tide began silently to ebb, and in due
-time it left the marsh bare. But, oh! what a dismal<span class="pagenum" id="Page_47">[Pg 47]</span>
-spectacle that was! Everywhere fat banks of black mud,
-nourishing everlasting mangroves, the obscene slime here
-piled up in great rotting masses, there smooth in beds,
-from which bubbles of impure air would come bursting
-to the surface, and sending up hideous smells of putrefaction.
-The air, indeed, became as the air of a pest-house.
-Dank vapours began to roll amid the trees, a
-sort of seething steam boiled up from the pools and
-canals, and by night-time a wet grey fog, which was as
-the very breath of fever, brooded all through the marsh.
-The night wind was hardly felt amid these woody solitudes;
-and if a gust sometimes swept by us, it only
-brought the unwholesome vapour in fresh supplies.
-From time to time, we called to each other. Nicky recommended
-me to keep the collar of my doublet between
-my teeth, so as to breathe through the stuff, but we
-suffered terribly from hunger. With the morning, the
-fog lifted, and the tide, which had of course flowed and
-ebbed during the night, began to flow again. Still, there
-was no appearance of relief. We would even have welcomed
-the arrival of the Spaniards, but not an oar or
-paddle-splash broke the terrible silence. We were both,
-I think, falling into a sort of stupor, when Nicky suddenly
-shouted to me.</p>
-
-<p>‘There—see, there!’ he cried; ‘down the channel!’</p>
-
-<p>I looked, and lo! our canoe, still floating on her side
-and full of water, was coming drifting up, rubbing the
-mangrove stems, on my side of the channel.</p>
-
-<p>‘Now or never, Will Thistle!’ cried Nicky. ‘This is
-life or death! Catch her as she passes!’</p>
-
-<p>I roused all my strength, and slipped down from the
-fork, where I had been sitting, until my legs were in the
-water. The canoe drifted close in, and I had no difficulty
-in catching the rope, which yet hung from her bow, and
-making it fast to a tree. At this Nicky gave a great
-hurrah, and slipping from his perch, swam boldly across
-the deep water, having grasped my hand before I was
-aware of his proximity. ‘Here,’ says he, ‘let me right
-the boat, a Mosquito man taught me the art.’ And,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_48">[Pg 48]</span>
-sure enough, in a minute or two the canoe was swimming
-properly, only still half full of water. This, however, we
-speedily baled with our hats, and getting into the canoe,
-found it none the worse. By good chance a couple of
-spare paddles had been secured in the boat, with a piece
-of spun-yarn. We, being so far fortunate, shook hands
-with each other very heartily; and after bestowing a few
-sorrowful words upon our unhappy comrades, all of whom
-were indeed lost, we set ourselves to consider what was
-our best course to return again to the settlement. We
-could either have gone on with the flowing tide, and
-landed upon the savannah, as we originally purposed,
-from whence we could have made our way by land,
-although the journey would be toilsome, or we might
-return into the open lagoon in the canoe, and so paddle
-down the coast. This last plan we determined upon, even
-although to follow it there would be a necessity for waiting
-some hours, until the force of the flood tide had spent
-itself. But to wait in hope is another matter from
-remaining in despair; and so, making ourselves as comfortable
-in the canoe as we could, we tarried patiently. At
-length, the stream beginning to slacken, we pushed off, and
-paddled cautiously seaward. Coming to the spot where the
-rope had been stretched across the channel, we paused,
-and after some search, having found it, we managed to
-cast loose either end, although it was then near two feet
-under water, with the intention of carrying it away as a
-memorial of our escape. Hardly, however, had we got
-it into the canoe, when we heard the sound of oars and
-voices rapidly approaching, as if from the landward side.
-We paused to listen, hoping it might be our comrades
-coming in search of us; but presently the sound approached
-so near as to enable us to distinguish the
-Spanish accent of the speakers.</p>
-
-<p>‘Give way for the love of God!’ I exclaimed, tossing
-the rope aside. We both seized the paddles, but ere the
-canoe had got headway, a large boat, full of men, suddenly
-appeared behind us at a winding of the channel.
-At sight of the canoe they set up a great shout, called<span class="pagenum" id="Page_49">[Pg 49]</span>
-upon us in Spanish, French, and English, to surrender.
-But we only plied our paddles the harder, working fast
-to seaward.</p>
-
-<p>Oh, thought I, that we had not removed the rope, and
-then the Spaniards, in their eagerness, would have been
-caught in their own snare; but a minute’s reflection told
-me that the tide was then too high for the line to have
-stopped the pursuing boat. The chase was now a most
-eager one. True, we were tired and faint; but the sight
-of our deadly enemies nerved our arms; the paddles bent
-and cracked and the light canoe flew over the water with
-a speed which the heavy boat astern could not hope long
-to cope with. At this moment the Spaniards fired at us,
-the bullet flashed in the water alongside, and Nicky cried
-to zig-zag the canoe—that is, to pull her by jerks from
-side to side, out of her true course, so as to make the
-object a more difficult one to hit. We accordingly paddled
-in this fashion, and it was completely effectual: not
-a shot struck us. Now a ball would sing overhead; now
-one would tear up the still water alongside of us; but
-neither the canoe nor ourselves were hit, although the
-Spaniards must have fired a score of shots. Still the
-efforts we were making were too severe to be long continued;
-and, in spite of our exertions, our muscles began
-to flag. It was then that, ahead of us, we saw a bend in
-the channel, on the right of which grew a huge mangrove,
-with dozens of long cord-like withes depending
-into the water. ‘Thank God, we shall do yet,’ said
-Nicky, who knew the channel well. ‘Pull for the other
-side of that big mangrove!’ And in a moment the canoe
-glanced round the corner in question, and we were shut
-out from the view of the Spaniards. Here a small muddy
-creek almost covered with foliage, diverged from the
-main channel.</p>
-
-<p>‘I know not where it leads,’ said my comrade, ‘but we
-must take it. The strait is too narrow to row in, so we
-cannot be followed.’</p>
-
-<p>The advice was good, and the canoe speedily flew up
-the tributary creek, urged on, not only by our paddles,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_50">[Pg 50]</span>
-but a favouring current. This last circumstance gave us
-good heart, for the tide being now ebbing, and the current
-along the passage in our favour, it was evident that
-it led to the open sea. The Spanish boat had, no doubt,
-passed the outlet of the small creek without observing it,
-for as we sat silently to listen, we heard the dash of the
-oars and the shouts of our pursuers to the left, but could
-see nothing through the thicket of mangrove stems. We
-were about to resume our paddles again when the distant
-sound of musquetry struck our ears. We both listened
-breathlessly; volley after volley was fired, and mingling
-with it came the deep roar of culverins and other heavy
-ordnance. In a moment the crew of the boat near us, as
-though they had also heard the noise of conflict, gave a
-great shout of ‘Death to the Pirates!’ for so they called
-the Buccaneers, and shot off their pieces in a loud straggling
-volley.</p>
-
-<p>‘The settlement is beset,’ said Nicky; ‘the Spaniards
-are on us in great force, and they must have been
-lurking in the lagoon for days; this explains the cowardly
-treachery of the rope,’ and he broke into loud invectives
-against our enemies, to all of which I most heartily said
-‘Amen.’ For was not this attack most wanton? Here
-were we, living in a wilderness belonging to no man, killing
-those wild animals which God hath appointed to be
-human food, and so far surely performing a service to our
-fellows, when down come the Spaniards upon us out of
-pure arrogance and ill-blood, hanging and shooting our
-defenceless hunters, and, as we had no doubt, now
-attempting to destroy our huts and the property, for the
-accumulation of which we had honestly sweated and
-toiled. But such it has been ever since any flag but
-that of Spain floated in these seas. The mariners of
-many nations came naturally to enrich themselves with
-the produce of the new-discovered lands; but Spain arrogantly
-desired to squeeze in her greedy gripe the whole
-New World! Therefore, is it wonderful that we—the
-sailors of England, Scotland, France, Holland, and Portugal—should
-give the Spaniards fierce and eager battle?<span class="pagenum" id="Page_51">[Pg 51]</span>
-It was they who began the warfare; and such being the
-case, we paid them back in their own coin—usually,
-indeed, giving them the worst of the bargain.</p>
-
-<p>Such were the natural thoughts which passed through
-my head as we sat listening to the roar of battle, which
-we could hear but faintly, being more than a league
-distant from home. Presently, without speaking, we
-addressed ourselves steadily to our paddies, and it was
-not long before, to our great joy, we shot out of the
-dreary forest of mangroves, and found ourselves in the
-clear water of the lagoon. The boat which had given us
-chase was not anywhere to be seen; but we now heard
-the firing distinctly, for it was kept up very hot and constant.
-By this time the tide was running out like a mill
-stream, and the canoe was swept down with great rapidity
-before it. There was no wind, and the current had a
-glassy look; the air, too, was inexpressibly sultry.
-Great wreaths of dense vapour hung upon the hills, and
-the firmament was one louring sea of black clouds piled
-one above another, as though climbing up on each other’s
-vapoury shoulders from the horizon to the zenith.
-Presently the gloom increased to a foreboding blackness,
-which hung upon land and sea. The sounds of the birds
-and the insects were hushed, and in the intervals of the
-firing we heard only the low continuous rush of the turbid
-tide washing amid the mangroves. All at once a
-great flash of lightning tore, as it were, the black firmament
-into a blue gulf of flame, and at the same instant
-the thunder came, not rumbling or pealing, as I have
-heard it in Britain, but exploding with a splitting crash
-which seemed right above us, and which went through
-and through our ears. A quick succession of flashes
-and peals followed, so that I was almost blinded and
-deafened, for I had never seen or heard such terrible
-thunder or lightning; and then, at the recommendation
-of Nicky, who said that the storm would probably clear
-up with a squall, which we were ill prepared to face in
-the open lagoon, we paddled into a little opening in the
-amphibious forest, and made the canoe fast amid the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_52">[Pg 52]</span>
-trees. Here we abode for more than half-an-hour, the
-thunder and lightning continuing to be fearful; and the
-effect of each flash, gleaming down through the thick
-leaves and branches of the network of boughs above us,
-and lighting up with a grim glare the unwholesome
-marsh, with its slimy stake-like boles of trees, its long
-twisting withes, and its black oily pools and channels,—the
-effect of all this was, I say, very fearfully grand.
-But at length the rain began to fall; the gloom deepened,
-so that under the mangroves it was as murk as midnight;
-but gazing from beneath them to the opposite side of the
-lagoon, we saw dimly a sort of moving and rending of
-the vapoury clouds, and then a sudden and perpendicular
-descent upon the hills of what appeared to be countless
-streaks of mist or vapour, binding, as it were, the
-green earth by webs of watery thread to the firmament.
-This, Nicky said, was the rain, and truly we found it so;
-for the misty appearance spread fast and far, and we
-heard a mighty rustling sound, which became louder and
-louder, until the windows of heaven above us were
-opened, and down, not in mere drops, as it appeared to
-me, but in opaque sheets and masses of falling water,
-tumbled that blinding rain, lashing the sea as though it
-were smitten by rods into churning foam, and beating
-with a continuous assault our leafy canopy, until it poured
-through the drenched branches in tiny waterfalls.
-Meanwhile we cowered in the canoe dripping from every
-limb, and watching the weather over the lagoon. Before
-long, there was a sudden rift or opening torn through
-the veiling fog, and the perpendicular lines of the rain
-became slanting, or were broken and dispersed. At the
-same moment, we saw distant ridges which were hid and
-lost before in the vapour, now standing out clearly and
-rigidly in the thinning air, and Nicky whispered to me
-to note how the feathery palms were bending and shaking,
-as though great airy hands were seeking to drag them up
-by the roots. It was the clearing squall, and a few
-moments only passed away ere heavy dank puffs sighed
-through the mangroves with a wet, warm, unwholesome<span class="pagenum" id="Page_53">[Pg 53]</span>
-savour, as the steams of a caldron where masses of putrid
-vegetation were simmering, and then, driving before it a
-broad belt of tumbling foam, and whistling and hurtling
-through the air with a sound as of rushing wings and
-blowing trumpets, the blast came down from the far-off
-mountains and fell upon the sea. I have often seen more
-violent squalls since, I have also been afloat and ashore
-during a hurricane or tornado, but this was the first West
-Indian tempest I encountered, and I did not soon forget
-the great grandeur of the elements—the torn clouds flying
-in misty fragments—the blast whizzing through the
-trees, with a long loud eldritch cry—the foam gathered
-up from the sea, like the drift from the great wreaths of
-snow at Christmas on a Scottish muir—the rustling hosts
-of leaves, and rent and riven foliage scattered through the
-air—all the confusion of wild noises, the dash of the
-troubled sea, and the constant crackling and smashing of
-boughs and branches, torn out and blown fast away to leeward.</p>
-
-<p>In the midst of the elemental strife there shone upon
-the waving and dripping woods, and the torn and tumbling
-sea, a pale watery ray of sunlight. This was the
-indication that the fury of the storm was over. The
-broken clouds showed patches of deep azure here and
-there; the mists had been rolled away to sea in the impetuous
-currents of air; presently the gust lulled; the
-foam flew no longer about the water; and the birds began
-to cry from out the thickets. Nicky therefore counselled
-that we should again put to sea.</p>
-
-<p>‘The squall,’ he said, ‘must have put an end to the
-fight, and if the Spaniards be attacking our huts from
-their ships, which is most likely, they may well have
-been either driven ashore upon the bluff, or blown out
-to sea.’</p>
-
-<p>So we paddled cautiously along the edge of the mangroves,
-listening for any sound of the renewal of the
-combat, but heard none. It was obvious that, one way
-or another, the matter was decided—either that our comrades
-had been overpowered, or that the Spaniards had<span class="pagenum" id="Page_54">[Pg 54]</span>
-been forced by the weather to discontinue the attack.
-At length, we approached a point in the shore where the
-character of the bank changed—the ground heaving itself
-boldly above the high-water mark, and the mangroves
-ceasing to grow; a little further on, a bluff of limestone
-rock, overgrown with brush and creeping trees, and its
-base green with tangled and slippery sea-weeds, stretched
-out into the water, and from the top of this we knew our
-settlement was visible. Having, therefore, made fast the
-canoe in a suitable place, we clambered through the
-dripping grass and leaves to the summit, and there saw a
-piteous sight. The rock being high, we overlooked several
-small capes and bays which stretched between us and
-our late habitation, and saw plainly the green bank upon
-which our huts stood, and the pretty clear bay, with its
-crescent of white sand and shingle beneath. In this bay—with
-her top-gallant-masts struck, and top-masts and
-yards lowered—there lay a great Spanish ship, carrying
-not less than thirty guns, with immensely high forecastle
-and poop. Moored somewhat nearer the beach was the
-smaller Spanish ship which had already attacked us,
-riding also very snugly with her top hamper lowered;
-and astern of them, and ashore upon the rocky bluff
-which formed the seaward horn of our bay, was a small
-sloop, which, as we conjectured, had been driven from
-her moorings by the force of the tempest, and now lay
-bodily upon the rocks, the sea beating and breaking over
-her. But the piteous sight was our huts and storehouses—some
-lay in ruins on the ground, torn and shattered
-by cannon-balls, others had been set on fire, but the rain
-having so plenteously descended, had extinguished the
-flames, which, however, still smouldered in the blackened
-ashes and amid the charred timber, sending up thin
-volumes of bluish-grey smoke. All over the beach were
-scattered the bales and casks in which we had been used
-to store the provisions we made; and the principal of these
-the Spanish robbers were removing into the great ship;
-but, saddest sight of all, round the burning huts, and
-upon the shingle down to the water’s edge, were strewn<span class="pagenum" id="Page_55">[Pg 55]</span>
-the corpses of our late comrades, they having evidently
-sold their lives dear, for many Spanish soldiers and seamen
-were stretched out starkly among them.</p>
-
-<p>We long remained crouched amid the brushwood, regarding
-this sad spectacle as though fascinated by its
-horrors. Who had escaped? we thought; and, if any,
-where, and how? Not a man in our company but who
-was brave as the steel he wielded; but what could a
-handful of undisciplined hunters and sailors do against
-the broadsides of two Spanish men-of-war?</p>
-
-<p>Nicky and I looked at each other mournfully—unarmed,
-and fainting with hunger and thirst, what were we to do.
-Under the torments of the latter infliction, however, we
-found that we need not long suffer. In the hollow’s of
-the rocks, and the reservoirs of the large green leaves of
-divers plants, the heavy rain had left abundance of water,
-of which we drank and were refreshed. After this, we
-sat down in a sheltered nook to hold a council of war.
-The Spaniards were still busy upon the beach, and occasionally
-straggling into the woods. Boats were continually
-passing from the ships to our shingle wharf, and we
-saw preparations being made to warp the sloop off the
-rocks, from which we concluded that she had not been,
-much damaged. Nicky and I had hardly begun to consult
-upon our condition, when we suddenly heard the
-voices of men in a suppressed tone, not far from us in the
-thick underwood. As the speakers might be Spanish, we
-ceased to talk, and lay close, burying our persons, as it
-were, in the long coarse grass, and listening with all our
-ears. The distant talking continued, but in what tongue
-we could not tell, for the wind still blew in gusts, and
-ever and anon carried away the sound. At length, just
-as we were despairing of making out who our neighbours
-were, I felt something wet and cold glide from under my
-bare leg, and turning sharply round, I saw the grass
-moving, and the green glistening skin of a snake gliding
-over my flesh. Involuntarily, and with a great shout, I
-started up. ‘It is all over,’ said Nicky; ‘we are discovered.’
-But in a moment a gruff voice hallooed—</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_56">[Pg 56]</span></p>
-
-<p>‘Who goes there?’</p>
-
-<p>And we both joyfully cried out in reply, that we were
-friends and comrades. Immediately there was a great
-rustling in the boughs, and running up thither we presently
-found a remnant of our own company, who grasped
-our hands, and could scarce speak for joy at seeing us.
-The men who thus joined us were five in number: Ezra
-Hoskins, an English seaman of Dover, called by us Stout
-Jem, not only for his size and muscle, which were prodigious,
-but because of his boldness and fearlessness of
-heart; then there was another Englishman, from Newcastle,
-whose real name I know not, because I never
-heard him called by any appellation but that of Black
-Diamond; and a Hollander, a sturdy slow-witted fellow,
-from Helvoetsluys, near the Brill, whom we called Meinheer;
-the other two persons were the Mosquito Indians,
-Blue Peter and Jack, skilful strikers of fish and manatee,
-and very attached, faithful fellows.</p>
-
-<p>You may be sure that we had much to tell each other
-of our adventures. First, Nicky narrated our mischance
-in the Mangrove Creek, from the devil-like snares of the
-crafty and cowardly Spaniards. And then, Stout Jem
-told how, in the evening of the previous day, the Indians
-being fishing towards the open sea, saw the sloop working
-up with the last of the sea-breeze, but considered her to
-be a friend, from one of the windward islands, come to
-load; and how the Buccaneers, being thus thrown off
-their guard, had hoisted lights upon the headland, to
-guide her after it fell dark. It had certainly surprised
-them to see answering lights, as it appeared, further up
-the lagoon, and they had set a good watch, and were
-wakeful in consequence, not well knowing what to expect.
-As the night wore on, and our canoe did not make
-its appearance, their anxiety increased, and towards
-morning a Mosquito man, who had been hunting manatee
-in the sedgy banks of the savannahs, came into the
-settlement, and reported that he had heard the oars of
-boats pulling in the Mangrove Channels, and that he had
-seen lights glimmering amid the night-fog. It was now<span class="pagenum" id="Page_57">[Pg 57]</span>
-evident that there was something in the wind, but they
-never reckoned on being attacked by such a force as came
-against them. Besides, the strangers might be all French
-from Tortugas, or St. Christopher’s, or Dutch from Curaçoa,
-and might not exactly know how the old settlers
-would relish an intrusion in their hunting-grounds. It
-was not until almost day, that our comrades saw a great
-ship coming into the bay, being towed against the land-wind
-or <em>terral</em>, which was then waxing faint, by her
-boats. A pirogue went off to her, but not returning,
-those on shore concluded that the arrival was friendly,
-and that their comrades had stayed on board to carouse,
-and they were only undeceived upon the rising of the
-sun, when they saw two Spanish men-of-war, besides the
-sloop, lying in the bay, and were saluted with hot salvos
-of artillery. Seeing their mistake, the Buccaneers, following
-their usual tactics, leaped into their canoes and
-tried to board. But the Spaniards hove great stones and
-cold shot into the boats, keeping up at the same time a
-sharp discharge of musketry, so that the canoes being
-broken and swamped, those who were not maimed or
-killed of their crews, were fain to swim to land, where
-they were again attacked by a body of Spaniards, who,
-with loud shouts, issued from the woods, proving how
-skilfully the whole position had been invested. The Buccaneers,
-being thus sorely discomfited, retreated into the
-cover of the brushwood and trees, and maintained a distant
-fight, aiming chiefly at the Spaniards who showed themselves
-on board the ships, and those who emerged from
-the seaward-side of the huts. This lasted nearly all the
-morning, when the weather becoming threatening, the
-Spaniards, who were until then held as it were in check,
-determined to make a great effort, and calling to their
-men ashore to take care of themselves, opened a great
-fire upon the huts, the balls crashing through and through
-them, and, at the same time, flinging fire-balls and other
-combustibles, so that presently one-half of the settlement
-was in flames, and the other demolished. Then the
-Dons landed in great force, and were met by the remnant<span class="pagenum" id="Page_58">[Pg 58]</span>
-of our comrades, who fought desperately. But the
-Spaniards having overwhelming numbers, finally routed
-them, and drove them by small parties into the woods.
-It was at the conclusion of this affray that the storm
-came on, and since its abatement our comrades had been
-roving along the shore, seeking any other survivors of the
-fight, but hitherto finding none.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="r10">
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_VI">CHAPTER VI.<br><br>
-<span class="fs80">HOW THE DEADLY FEVER OF THE COAST FASTENS ON ME.</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p>Such was the history of the treacherous Spanish attack
-which destroyed the settlement of the Marmousette.
-Our first care was to learn how the party we had met in
-with were armed, and great was our delight to find that
-the Indians carried two guns apiece, nearly all the muskets
-in the village having been brought into the woods.
-Besides there was abundance of ammunition. After
-a short consultation, it was determined to take the canoe,
-and although our number would somewhat overload her,
-to cross to the other side of the bay, where we had more
-security against being molested. Having therefore carefully
-looked to our pieces, we clambered down the bank,
-and standing by the canoe, unanimously invested Stout
-Jem with the command of the expedition. As the
-Indians used the paddles most dexterously, they were set
-to work to propel us, and with Stout Jem for steersman,
-we set out. On our way I began to experience a drowsiness,
-which I had before felt, but immediately checked.
-Now, however, the sensation, amounting indeed to one of
-impending stupor, began again to overpower me. My
-chin fell upon my chest, and I had little snatches of disturbed
-sleep, in which curious confused ideas, and odd
-combinations of words and things, seemed to float into
-my brain, and which, when I started up again, which I
-would do every minute, fled away like phantoms, so that
-I could not for my life remember what I had been dreaming<span class="pagenum" id="Page_59">[Pg 59]</span>
-of the moment before. All this time I was inwardly
-urged to speak, I seemed to have nothing to say, but
-still something forced my tongue and lips to move, and
-all at once I called out—</p>
-
-<p>‘Is that a black corby on the thorn-bush near the boat’s
-grapnel?’</p>
-
-<p>At this extraordinary speech, the Englishmen in the
-canoe turned sharp round to me, and Stout Jem asked
-what I meant. At his voice all the dreamy sensations
-left me, and I felt myself blushing up to the roots of my
-hair, and wondering what I had said, for I remembered
-not a word.</p>
-
-<p>‘Here,’ said Stout Jem, kindly, ‘swallow this, my
-good boy;’ and he held me a great flask of spirits.
-‘You have been breathing over-much marsh fog on an
-empty stomach, but you’ll live to pay off Jack Spaniard
-yet.’</p>
-
-<p>I took the flask and held it to my head, when suddenly
-the greasy leathern bottle appeared to swell and lengthen,
-until it seemed a puncheon which I held. A curious
-nervous feeling came crawling over my limbs, and my
-breath grew thick, and my eyes dim. The first taste of
-the brandy banished these sensations, and the cordial
-marvellously restored me.</p>
-
-<p>‘You must eat somewhat when we go ashore,’ said
-Nicky. ‘I am ravenous; and then we will consult on
-what we can do to take our revenge.’</p>
-
-<p>‘No, no; no eat,’ said Blue Peter, the Mosquito
-Indian; ‘sleep mosh, sleep good, smoke pipe, and sleep
-cool and long.’</p>
-
-<p>But I felt so much better that I fully intended to make
-a good dinner. We landed in one of the bushy coves
-which abound in the frith of the Marmousette, and which
-could not be seen by the Spaniards on the other bank.
-Stout Jem then despatched the Indians to hunt, and
-ordered the rest of the party to aid in building a hut.
-Nicky and myself, however, were so weak from want of
-food, that we were excused; and the Dutchman having
-some biscuits and smoked beef in his pocket, generously<span class="pagenum" id="Page_60">[Pg 60]</span>
-gave us enough to make a good meal. Meantime, Stout
-Jem, Black Diamond, and Meinheer, were actively at
-work. They had two hatchets, and their long knives,
-and with these they felled and prepared sufficient wood
-for their purpose, driving stakes into the earth, and interweaving
-leafy branches, with the skill of experienced
-foresters. Nicky and I were then set to work to pull a
-quantity of coarse long grass, which grew upon the beach,
-for beds; and one of the Mosquito men returning, he
-kindled a fire, and began to cook the hind quarter of a
-fine boar which he had shot in the wood. Meantime, I
-was plucking the grass, sometimes sitting by the seaside,
-for I felt weak and ill. The food I had eaten was no
-refreshment. My temples throbbed strangely and my
-skin was fevered and dry. Then these horrible wandering
-thoughts began to come again, and I squeezed my head
-with my hands, as though I could thus drive them out.
-Sometimes I thought I felt again the hot marsh vapour
-sickening the air; then the sea-breeze fanning me, I
-would tear the clothes from my chest, and put back my
-long dank hair to let the blessed cool wind play freely on
-me, and cool my seething blood.</p>
-
-<p>All at once I saw, under the shade of a genipa tree, a
-tall stout man, who stood motionless, and watched me.
-Deeming him a Spaniard, I would have shouted out, but
-my tongue refused to obey me, and turning hot and dry,
-rattled as it were against my teeth, while no sound but a
-low hiss could I form. Still the figure stood there; and
-now I saw a glimmer as of a naked weapon which it held.
-The sun being now setting, his rays came slanting down,
-and one of these quivering through the trees fell full
-upon the face of the stranger, and I saw that it was
-Walshe, with his great eyes glaring at me, just as they
-glared when the shark rose in the mangrove canal, and
-pulled him down beneath his crunching teeth. I stood
-trembling, and trying to pray. The features were livid
-and blue, and the eyes sunk and expressionless, yet
-horribly bright. Just at this moment one of the last
-puffs of the sea-breeze shook the trees around, and the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_61">[Pg 61]</span>
-sunlight falling in a different stream, and chequered by
-other branches upon the appearance, the face gradually
-seemed to change. Feature after feature melted away,
-until the agonized countenance of the unfortunate seaman
-was gone, and, instead of it, there remained the massive
-features and pensive gravity of my preserver on board
-the Frenchman—Wright. Just then the weapon, which
-I had formerly observed to glitter, moved, and I saw the
-figure heave up a great broad axe on one hand, and point
-to it with the other. It was, indeed, the regicide, with
-the emblem and the instrument of his deed.</p>
-
-<p>Making a sudden effort, I burst the leaden bonds which
-seemed to confine me, and with a strange courage rushed
-forward. As I did the phantom grew dim and dimmer,
-and when I placed my hand upon its breast, I felt but
-the gnarled bark of the genipa tree, whilst the axe, at
-the same instant, seemed to become a branch with clustering
-foliage dancing in the wind. I grew directly sick
-and faint.</p>
-
-<p>‘Oh, my God!’ I murmured, ‘I am going mad! My
-brain is whirling, and my eyes make me see things which
-are not and so I sank upon the ground, and sobbed.
-Presently, I was somewhat better, and I manned myself.
-‘It is but a feverish attack,’ I thought. ‘I will return
-and try to sleep.’ It was, however, with some difficulty
-that I arrived at the hut. My limbs felt as if loaded
-with lead, and the pain of an intense headache went like
-hot iron wires into my brain. When I reached our half-finished
-abode, I saw everything through a sort of haze,
-and the voices at my ear appeared to come from miles
-away. I was soon placed, lying upon bundles of grass,
-in the windward side of the hut, and after that I
-remember little more of what happened during three
-nights and three days. Only I know that my sufferings
-were very great; that my mind appeared to ramble as
-though it were a disturbed spirit or ghost flitting all over
-the world. Now, I would seem to be far away on the
-pleasant coast of Fife. The sun would shine, and the
-corn rustle and the yellow broom by the burnie’s banks<span class="pagenum" id="Page_62">[Pg 62]</span>
-smell sweet in the summer’s breath. But I could enjoy
-nought. I was as it were seared, and the sources of
-pleasure dried up. I saw the forms of people I loved,
-but I could speak to none. I saw my mother sitting on
-a sandy knowe, resting her head upon her hand, and
-looking over the blue sea. But when I would embrace
-her, there came darkness and pain, and the vision vanished.
-Then, perhaps, in my delirium, I would fancy I was at
-sea; sometimes it was in the old fisher-boat, the Royal
-Thistle. No wind would stir, the sky would be glowing
-like a heated copper globe, and the boat would lie moveless
-as though nailed to the unstirring sea. Suddenly my
-father’s eyes would look into mine with a long wan stare,
-and so would we sit glaring at each other, like famishing
-and despairing beasts, while months, and years, and ages,
-would appear to come and go and bring no change.
-Anon, the mood would alter. Then I was on board the
-old brig, Jean Livingstone, with a merry breeze and a
-blithesome crew. The bonny crags of St. Andrew’s
-Bay would seem under our lee, with the ruined towers
-of abbeys and churches rising over the green links, and
-fading from our sight, as we worked gallantly seawards.
-But the scene would straightway change to a furious
-storm in a mid-winter night, with the foam of the sea and
-the snow-flakes flying together. Then round the light of
-the binnacle there would crowd ghastly faces, staring
-into mine—faces with shaggy antique beards like the
-ancient sailors of Sir Patrick Spens, long, long sleeping
-in the wild North Sea; and so surrounded by these fishy
-eyes of hapless drowned mariners, I would feel the good
-brig seem to founder beneath my feet, so that I would
-start struggling up from my bed of grass, crying out that
-I was drowning—that the boiling waves were choking me!</p>
-
-<p>This was my seasoning fever, as they called it; and,
-though it did not last long—thanks to the good treatment
-and the medicinal herbs of the Mosquito men—it
-left me passing weak and helpless. I recovered my reason
-all at once, as one waking from the stupor of deep sleep.
-My hair had been cut close, and my head was tied round<span class="pagenum" id="Page_63">[Pg 63]</span>
-with freshly-plucked plantain leaves, constantly drenched
-with water. I lay upon blankets, none of which we possessed
-when I was taken ill, and my linen was reasonably
-clean and fresh. The wattled hut was open to the
-breeze on every side, and as it contained but one bed
-more, I guessed that it had been given up for my use and
-that of my partner, Nicky, as indeed it had. Looking
-around, I saw several pots, pans, baskets, and boxes scattered
-about, from which I concluded that the Spaniards
-had departed, and that my comrades had been able to
-recover some of the wreck of their property from the
-ruins of their habitations. And this, indeed, I found
-afterwards to be the case.</p>
-
-<p>I was too weak at first to call out, and so remained in
-silence, enjoying a delicious languor, and cool and moist
-from head to foot. The fever had thoroughly left me,
-and I felt thankful and devoutly glad. Presently I distinguished
-the well-known smell of the smouldering fire
-of the boucan floating into the hut, and soon afterwards,
-Nicky, with bare arms and grimed hands, entered; his
-eyes sparkled when he saw me so much recovered, and
-presently calling the rest together, they all shook hands
-with me, and told me to be of good cheer, for I had fore-reached
-on the marsh fever, and would soon be quite
-hearty. And so, indeed, it was. I grew very hungry,
-and, being well fed, regained my strength fast, so that,
-two or three days after the fever left my blood, I was
-abroad sniffing the cool breezes of the sea.</p>
-
-<p>Except two men—both French—who had joined when
-I was ill, none of the survivors of our original party had
-turned up; some of them had no doubt been made
-prisoners by the Spaniards, others might have started off
-along the coast to the eastward, as, indeed, many previously
-intended; but we feared that upwards of one
-half of our comrades were either captives, who would
-be forced to labour in the mines of Cuba, or had already—and
-the fate of these latter was more to be envied—died
-with their wounds, in front, giving battle to the
-Spanish robbers.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_64">[Pg 64]</span></p>
-
-<p>Being little able to work for some time after my recovery,
-and the rest of the party being engaged in the
-usual toil of hunting wild cattle, and preserving the meat
-by the boucan, it was often my habit to take the canoe
-and proceed in her down towards the mouth of the bay,
-so as to enjoy the fresh and briny breeze which came
-from the north-west across the ocean. To make these
-expeditions more pleasant, I prepared a mast with a small
-lug sail, such as the canoe could bear, and I could manage
-with ease. Almost my first trip, when thus provided,
-was to the scene of the late contest. I found nearly
-every trace of a settlement destroyed. The rude jetty
-was all but demolished, and over the ruins of the shattered
-huts, great crops of luxuriant herbage had grown,
-from which I often started snakes and venomous insects,
-such as centipedes and scorpions, who delighted to make
-their nests in the holes and crevices which they found in
-abundance amidst the ruins of our huts. On a sweet
-spot of green-sward, under the shadow of a great spreading
-tree, there were rows of little mounds, very green.
-Here our poor comrades lay buried. The Spaniards, it
-seems, had interred their dead, and on their departure,
-which happened on the day after I was attacked with
-fever, all our party had gone across the bay, and laid the
-dead Buccaneers beneath the mould. Upon the bark of
-the great tree I was at pains to carve a deep cross; for,
-though the symbol in Europe be the mark of a corrupt
-and idolatrous church, still I felt that in the wilderness
-it might bear a truer and a wider meaning, and point out
-to future strangers that the mounds beneath the tree
-covered the graves of Christian men.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="r10">
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_VII">CHAPTER VII.<br><br>
-<span class="fs80">THE BUCCANEERS TIRE OF THE LIFE ON SHORE, AND DETERMINE<br>
-TO GO AGAIN TO SEA.</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p>Searching about the place I often discovered little
-matters, which I stored in the canoe and brought to our
-new settlement, such as axes and hammers, harpoons for<span class="pagenum" id="Page_65">[Pg 65]</span>
-striking fish, fragments of cordage, rope and canvas; and
-twice I dug up from the ruins, boxes containing seamen’s
-clothes, which were very welcome to us all; in one of
-these trunks I discovered some Spanish books, including
-a grammar and dictionary, and of these I hastened to avail
-myself, inasmuch as I saw that a knowledge of this language
-might soon be of the greatest service to me. Neither did
-my companions grudge that I thus applied much of my time
-to study, for none of them knew more than a few words of
-Spanish, and they were quite aware of the advantage of
-having one at least of that party conversant with that
-tongue.</p>
-
-<p>Thus, time passed away tolerably pleasantly. The
-season for the arrival of the ships expected to load with
-the boucan prepared for them at the village on the east
-side of the bay, having passed, and none of them appearing,
-we concluded that stragglers from our old company
-had succeeded in making their way to Jamaica, Tortugas,
-and other islands, and had informed the merchants and
-planters there of the attacks of the Spaniards, and the
-utter ruin of the settlement, adding, very probably, that
-they were the sole survivors of the massacre. It, therefore,
-became a question with us what to do. The Frenchmen
-were for journeying along the coast to the westward,
-and then watching an opportunity to go across to Tortugas;
-but Stout Jem told them they might do so if they
-pleased, but he would prefer an island where his own
-countrymen had something to say in matters, an opinion
-which the rest of the English, as well as the Dutchmen
-and the Indians, who do not love the French, joined in
-very cordially. The Frenchmen, who, to do them justice,
-were very good fellows, on this gave up their proposition
-and swore that they would follow Stout Jem to the death.</p>
-
-<p>‘Say you so, my boys?’ cried the Dover mariner.
-‘Then so be it; and what I propose is this. Here be
-nine stout men of us, for I count the Indians as good as
-white blood. Our peaceful trade in beef and hides, hath
-been ruined by these accursed Spaniards, so I vote for
-the sea again.’</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_66">[Pg 66]</span></p>
-
-<p>This proposal meeting with a clamour of approbation,
-Stout Jem flung aloft his hat.</p>
-
-<p>‘We have had enough of the shore this bout, mates,’
-quoth he. ‘I want to hear the wind whistle through
-tarry ropes again, and feel a stout ship dancing under
-my feet.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Yah, yah,’ said the Hollander. ‘We zaal be Zee
-Roovers once more;’ and all the company flung up their
-hats like our leader, and swore that they would take deep
-vengeance on Jack Spaniard. For my part, I was well
-pleased, for I felt I was a sailor, and that I had no business
-to be following a hunter’s life ashore. I had not
-very much taste for shooting bullocks, and still less for
-breaking them up, cooking and storing them; and,
-although I had always cheerfully taken my turn to watch
-the boucan fire, my mind would often stray away upon
-the ocean, and I would pant for the fresh sea-breeze, and
-the dash of the foaming brine. As for my comrade, Nicky,
-he was that easy kind of going man, that he seemed to
-care very little whether he was on land or sea. He
-worked, ate, drank, sang and slept, and then rose merrily
-next day to go through the same routine. But Stout
-Jem, who was the life and soul, as well as the captain of
-our party, was a sailor all over. He had been many
-years in the Caribbean sea, was a good pilot, understood
-every current, and every indication of the weather; and
-moreover, knew by heart every buccaneering trick for
-easing of their cargoes the treasure-ships of the Dons.</p>
-
-<p>But before we could go to sea, we must have a vessel;
-and saving the canoe, which was hardly fit for a cruiser
-we were as unprovided as though we lived on the top of
-a mountain. There was nothing therefore for it, as we
-could not go in a ship to the Spaniards, but to wait until
-the Spaniards should come in a ship to us, that is to say,
-in such a small ship as we could master, and afterwards
-manage. We might indeed have not found much difficulty
-in entering an English privateer, many of whom we
-knew were hovering on the coast; but being acquainted
-with each other well, we preferred in the first place to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_67">[Pg 67]</span>
-capture such a small craft as we could man, afterwards
-making such additions to our crew as might from time to
-time be resolved on. In the meanwhile, we continued to
-hunt and prepare the flesh of wild cattle and boars, so
-that we should have a good stock of provisions when we
-were ready to go to sea.</p>
-
-<p>Being, as I have said, always fonder of water than land,
-I often induced the Mosquito Indians to allow me to go
-with them in their canoe, when they went to strike fish
-and manatee. Generally the Indians permit no one to
-accompany them in these expeditions, and if they are
-forced to allow a white man into the canoe, they will
-purposely miss their aim at every fish or animal they
-strike, and so return empty handed. However, I being
-a great favourite with Blue Peter, who had indeed saved
-my life in the fever; and losing no opportunity, by such
-petty gifts as I had it in my power to make, of showing
-my gratitude, he made no objections to my accompanying
-him and his comrade in many of their expeditions.</p>
-
-<p>We used to start before sunrise, Blue Peter in the
-bows of the canoe, and Jack in the stern, both paddling
-quickly, while I sat amidships in the bottom. No
-Europeans I ever saw can paddle so silently, swiftly,
-and surely as the Indians on the Mosquito coast. They
-hold the shaft of the paddle almost upright, never touching
-the gunwale therewith, or splashing rudely in the
-water. On the contrary, the broad part of the paddle
-dips as clean as a knife, and the canoe glides with a perfectly
-smooth and rapid motion, so that, did you not observe
-how fast the water ripples by, you would hardly think
-you were moving at all. When pursuing the manatee,
-our usual game, the head of the canoe was turned up the
-creek, to the higher banks, where the shore was sedgy
-and low, where the mangroves reared their dismal groves,
-and where, the water gradually becoming brackish and
-muddy, there is found floating and waving from the
-banks, the long narrow-bladed grass on which the manatee
-loves to feed. The creature we hunted is a harmless
-beast, like a great seal. It is a misfortune for himself<span class="pagenum" id="Page_68">[Pg 68]</span>
-that he has tender white flesh, tasting like veal, and that
-his skin makes very good thongs and straps, which the
-Buccaneers use for divers purposes. Were it not so, he
-might float unmolested in the warm muddy water, nibbling
-the streaming grass, as the lazy current carries his
-heavy form slowly up and down the mangrove canals,
-twinkling his little pig-like eyes, and anxiously jerking
-his great stupid-looking head, if a cayman rolls with a
-splash from the muddy bank into the river, or a squatting
-flock of wild-ducks rise with a whirr from the sedgy surface
-of a neighbouring pool.</p>
-
-<p>But the poor manatee, being good to eat, must submit
-to be harpooned and eaten. When we came to the feeding-ground
-which he loves, the Indians would paddle
-with double caution, and Blue Peter, who was the striker,
-would carefully examine his harpoon, and see that it lay
-convenient to his hand. The spear used for capturing
-the manatee is about eight feet long. The iron barb, a
-heavy and sharp piece of metal, is attached to the thicker
-end, and to the other is fastened a circular knob called
-the bobwood, round which is wound a strong line, one
-end of which is fast to the bobwood, the other to the
-iron of the harpoon. When the weapon is flung, the
-barb alone sinks into the creature’s flesh, the staff coming
-unloosed from the iron, and the line rapidly unwinding
-from the bobwood, as the stricken creature dives in its
-agony and fear. The Indians then paddle after the staff,
-and having seized it, gradually wear out the strength of
-the game, and kill it.</p>
-
-<p>I shall not soon forget the first manatee hunt I saw.
-We embarked at early dawn, and glided silently along
-the green shore, from which the mist of the night was
-lifting and rolling in white clouds far up the mountains.
-After long skirting the mangrove wood, we turned from
-the main channel into a narrow creek, slipping along in
-perfect silence. Listen as I would, I could not even hear
-the water at the canoe’s bow, her mould was so perfect,
-and so steady the strokes which propelled her. The drip
-of the water from the paddles, as they were lifted, alone<span class="pagenum" id="Page_69">[Pg 69]</span>
-made a slight tinkling sound. The sea-breeze had not
-yet begun to blow, and the sun came down scorchingly
-upon the tangled wood and the green water, the surface
-of which glanced like bright, clear oil. Presently Blue
-Peter laid his paddle noiselessly down, and took up the
-harpoon. I looked anxiously ahead. Clustered round
-the trunk of a vast mangrove, which rose up out of the
-water, there was a tangled heap of soaking grass and
-weeds. The kneeling Indian crouched as if he were a
-graven image of ebony or bronze, and I saw the floating
-weeds move, and heard a grinding, spluttering sound, as
-of a cow grazing. Then the Indian moved a finger of his
-left hand, which he had kept outstretched; his comrade
-at the stern saw the sign, and a peculiar sweep of the
-paddle sent the canoe slantingly towards the weeds. As
-she diverged from her course, Blue Peter stood erect, and
-raising his right arm, with all the muscles swelling out
-like knots and lumps of iron, darted the harpoon, as it
-appeared to me, into the centre of the moving weeds.
-Instantly there was a great splash and plunge, and the
-canoe rocked upon a wave, which scattered the floating
-herbage, so that I saw disappearing in the water the
-broad brown back of a creature as large as a cow. Blue
-Peter, the instant he struck, sank again upon his knees,
-and snatching up the paddle, prepared to move. Meantime
-I could see nothing of the harpoon, for it had been
-carried under water. The Mosquito men then talked to
-each other in their own tongue, pointing to the direction
-in which the manatee appeared to have dived, and then
-began to paddle lustily. About five minutes might have
-elapsed, when Blue Peter exclaimed, ‘Ho!—there!’ and
-pointed. I, looking in the same direction, descried the
-staff of the harpoon seeming to fly along the surface of
-the water, the round bobwood throwing up a foam two
-feet high. Then the Mosquito-men pulled hard in chase.
-I could never have thought that their gaunt, brown
-bodies had so much strength in them. The muscles of
-their naked arms and chests strained and swelled, the
-paddle-shafts cracked, and the canoe seemed at every<span class="pagenum" id="Page_70">[Pg 70]</span>
-stroke to be lifted out of the water. Still they did not
-gain upon the harpoon towed by the manatee, but, on
-the contrary, rather lost, so that I began to fear that we
-would never see either harpoon or quarry; but, on a
-sudden, the motion of the former stopped, and it floated
-tranquilly upon the water. The manatee, being fatigued,
-had sunk to the bottom, and lay there. We now paddled
-carefully up, and Blue Peter caught the staff, and began
-to pull upon the line. Immediately that the wounded
-creature felt the smart, it started again. I saw the line
-vibrate and stretch out in a direction abeam of the canoe;
-but, in a moment, Jack, who held the steering-paddle,
-swept the bows round in the direction taken by the
-manatee, while Blue Peter fastened the line to the prow
-of the canoe. There was a jerk or two, though not so
-much as I expected, and straightway we began to move
-ahead, Peter crouching in the bows, signing to Jack how
-to steer. For near a quarter of an hour did the wounded
-beast drag us through the water, sometimes so swiftly
-that the foam whizzed past us—anon changing his course
-so suddenly, that had not the canoe been steered with
-perfect skill, he would have dragged us under water.
-Then, his strength beginning to ebb from him fast, we
-hauled upon the line, and gradually closed with our prey,
-whose blood was now reddening the water. I pitied the
-poor creature, as he put his head above the surface, and
-grunted and moaned after his fashion, but he was soon
-out of his pain. Slipping alongside of the carcass, Blue
-Peter passed his long knife around its throat, and after
-one or two struggles and plunges, the manatee turned
-over upon its back, dead. We towed him ashore, and
-securing him to a tree, presently paddled off in search of
-more game of the same sort.</p>
-
-<p>But upon the whole, I better loved our fishing expeditions
-than the hunt of the manatee. The poor
-defenceless brute always inspired me with pity. There
-is a meekness about his face which moves one. He makes
-no attempt to turn to bay or show fight, but is slaughtered
-as unresistingly as a calf, and the haunts he loves are the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_71">[Pg 71]</span>
-muddy and unwholesome canals among the mangrove
-swamps. But in spearing fish we often rowed down the
-bay to the rocky points and ledges of reef which formed
-the outermost horns of the lagoon. There the clear, blue
-sea, white spangled by the merry strength of the sea-breeze,
-stretched illimitably out, and the everlasting surf
-flung aloft its clouds of sparkling spray, high up among
-the rocks, now and then giving the bushes a taste of the
-savour of brine. It was in the still pools and channels,
-formed by breakwaters of rock, that the canoe was then
-navigated. Let the sea-breeze be blowing, and the
-surging swells be tossing in, as hard and fast as they
-might, there was always calm water behind the reefs—so
-calm and so clear! I might think that I was looking into
-the swirlings of our trout-pool in the Balwearie Burn,
-but for the bright, jagged coral, and the strange sea-weeds
-at the bottom, and the still stranger fishes floating, as it
-were, in pure mid air, but a fathom down beneath the
-keel of the canoe. Gliding over these translucent waters,
-sometimes scraping the battered side of our skiff against
-the rough coral edges; sometimes receiving a sparkling
-shower of spray when a bigger wave than ordinary burst
-upon the outside reef, the Mosquito men were in their
-glory. Blue Peter stood erect in the bow, his black,
-flashing eyes fixed on the water as though he would note
-every scollop in the edge of the jagged sea-weed, or every
-wavy ridge on the bed of white sand, and his long thin
-fish-spear darting occasionally down into the flood to be
-straightway drawn, bending and quivering, back with a
-noble fish, writhing and floundering, impaled upon the
-barbs. Always upon these expeditions I kept a good
-look-out seaward, and often mounted pinnacles of rock
-that I might have the better view. Once or twice I saw
-a sail, apparently set on board a small vessel, slipping
-quickly down to the westward, or beating painfully to
-windward; but the barks were too far at sea for me to
-make out aught of their character or country.</p>
-
-<p>During this period of my sojourn in Hispaniola it was
-our custom to spend the evenings together in the principal<span class="pagenum" id="Page_72">[Pg 72]</span>
-hut—that which was first constructed, and which
-was of an ample bigness. Here, seated round a great
-chest, which served for a table, we smoked our pipes,
-drank pretty deep draughts of the rich palm wine, and
-told in turn stories of our lives and adventures. The
-hut being only wattled, and that very imperfectly, the
-strong land breeze blew through and through it, causing
-the flame of our solitary lamp to waver and flicker, and
-not unfrequently putting it out altogether. We sat upon
-bundles made of our clothes, or heaps of dried grass, and
-must, in sooth, have appeared a parcel of strange ragamuffins,
-with our faces burnt to mahogany colour by the
-sun; our hair and beards long, tangled, and matted;
-and our clothes, being coarse doublets and short jackets,
-cut in uncouth shapes, and often red and greasy with the
-blood and fat of the animals which it was our business to
-kill. Stout Jem, being reckoned the head and commander
-of our party, sat on a kind of settle for a throne, and the
-rest of us crowded as near the great chest as we could,
-the two Mosquito men excepted, who commonly sat apart
-squatted on their hams, and speaking to each other softly
-in their own tongue. Sometimes we would play dice on
-these evenings, not for money, of which we had none,
-but for the carcasses of the cattle which we had killed
-and flayed; but as the play was always fair and the dice
-true, it was generally found that no one either lost or
-gained much in the long run. It was, however, the storytelling
-nights I loved the best. Many of the tales then
-told were indeed very vulgar and common, and unworthy
-of being recorded, turning solely upon butcheries of the
-Spaniards at sea, and upon great seasons of debauch,
-after a successful cruise, in Tortugas or Jamaica. Not a
-few tales were also told of ghosts and omens, and such
-extravagances, which the superstitious nature of sailors
-causes them to believe and to hearken greedily to. I
-heard many such histories both at this time and afterwards,
-and I design to insert one here, not because I
-think it at all credible, but because it is a very good
-specimen of the histories of ghosts, phantoms, and other<span class="pagenum" id="Page_73">[Pg 73]</span>
-supernatural appearances which were current among the
-Buccaneers. This story was told by Stout Jem very
-solemnly, and listened to with no less eagerness; and in
-recounting it I will endeavour to put the matter into the
-narrator’s words, of which, for an uncultivated seaman,
-he had a good flow. Stout Jem called his history ‘The
-Legend of Foul-Weather Don,’ and to it I will devote
-the next chapter.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="r10">
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_VIII">CHAPTER VIII.<br><br>
-<span class="fs80">THE LEGEND OF FOUL-WEATHER DON.</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p>Stout Jem told it thus:—</p>
-
-<p>‘My story, mates, is a strange one, and I say not
-whether it be true or false. I heard it in the middle
-watch, one fine night, slipping down the coast of Porto
-Rico, and the seaman who told it to us, said, that when
-he was a boy he sailed with the man to whom the thing
-happened, in a big ship which hailed from Bristol. That
-the spirits of the dead walk the world—ay, and sail the
-seas—is a thing I cannot say nay to. I cannot tell you
-that I ever saw anything of the sort myself, but credible
-mariners and grave and sober men have assured me of
-things which have made my marrow creep, and the hair
-stand up, all bristling out of my flesh. Well, then, about
-this story. The man to whom the adventure happened,
-was by name Ned Purvis, a mariner. It must be nigh
-sixty years ago since he sailed out of the port of London,
-on a trading voyage to the coast of Guinea. Purvis was
-then a younker, there being little better than a year
-since he had followed the sea, and this was his first voyage
-abroad; he having undertaken it in the ship of his uncle,
-a good old man, of a mild disposition, and well loved of
-the crew. As for Ned Purvis, he was a reckless, ruffling
-blade, that cared neither for man nor devil, when his
-blood was up, and who thought but little of the glimmer
-of a drawn cutlass, or the flash of a pistol, in a quarrel.
-But as I told you, mates, the old man, the captain, was<span class="pagenum" id="Page_74">[Pg 74]</span>
-mild of speech and of heart, and greatly loved his nephew,
-and thought much of the lad’s spunk and wild spirit. So
-they sailed southerly, as became navigators, bound as
-they were to traffic for spices and rich oils and gold with
-the blacks of Africa.</p>
-
-<p>‘Having lost sight of England, they had prosperous
-winds and pleasant weather, and nought occurred until
-the seventh day from that in which they saw the last of
-the white cliffs. Then they were just moving through
-the water and no more, for the breeze was but a puff,
-and the sun going down, when all of a sudden they saw a
-boat with a man in it, so close aboard that you might toss
-a biscuit into her. It was curious, mates, that almost all
-the men on deck saw her at once, when she was, as it
-might be, alongside; and yet no one had seen her approaching.
-But strange as that was, comrades, it was
-not so strange as the cut of the boat, and, for that matter,
-the cut of the man in her. The stem and stern of the
-craft were very high, and ended in curled bits of carved
-wood. Her gunwale, too, was all carved and sculptured,
-in such a way as you may have seen the pulpits and
-choirs of cathedrals and abbeys, and such buildings in
-England and France, and the Low Countries, being very
-artificial work done with gravers and chisels.</p>
-
-<p>‘Ned Purvis remembered afterwards, when he saw a
-great Spanish painting of Christopher Columbus, landing
-on his second voyage upon the island of Hispaniola, that
-the admiral sailed in a barge, carved and ornamented after
-the fashion of that of which I am now telling you. And
-the man, mates, looked as old as his boat. He had on a
-high, conical hat, with a feather in it, and he wore a
-grave coloured doublet, of an old fashion, with slashes in
-the arms, and brocaded flowers embroidered thereon.
-Round his neck was a stiff ruff. He had red stockings,
-and great bunches of ribbon in his shoes. The face of
-this strange person was severe and grave. He had no
-moustachoes, but a thin peaked beard which fell over his
-frill. Every now and then he smiled with a strange, wild
-expression, which was that of a bitter sneer; and his eyes<span class="pagenum" id="Page_75">[Pg 75]</span>
-shot a sparkling light, which was stony and cold, and
-from which men turned their heads, as if by instinct.
-Well, then, the captain, when he saw this queer cruizer,
-seemed fascinated, and gazed upon him, as you may have
-seen small birds on the boughs gaze at snakes, whose
-eyes glitter out of the grass beneath, and presently the
-man in the boat waved his arm, as a signal to those on
-board to take him in. Well, no one stirred but Ned
-Purvis, and before the old captain could prevent him,
-Ned flung a rope to the stranger, who straightway caught
-hold of it and mounted on deck.</p>
-
-<p>‘“Where is your captain?” says he, in a hollow harsh
-voice.</p>
-
-<p>‘The old man comes forward, as pale as a corpse, and,
-quoth he—</p>
-
-<p>‘“In the name of God, what want ye on board my
-ship?”</p>
-
-<p>‘Now, at the name of God, Ned Purvis thought that
-the strange man started and shook: but he replied
-not, only taking the old captain by the hand, pointed to
-his boat, which was towing astern.</p>
-
-<p>‘“Men,” said the old mariner, faintly, “he will not
-be denied; get his boat aboard.”</p>
-
-<p>‘But the crew slunk together in a body, and murmured
-to each other, but put not a hand to rope or tackle.
-Then Ned Purvis stood forward.</p>
-
-<p>‘“Who are you?” said he, “and why should we take
-you or your boat aboard?”</p>
-
-<p>‘“You yourself asked me,” quoth the strange man;
-“you flung the rope; but for that I should have
-floated past you. I never come, but where some one
-welcomes me.”</p>
-
-<p>‘Now, at this, Ned Purvis confessed that he felt like a
-great sinner, and all the men turned round and looked
-first at him and then at the stranger. But Ned plucked
-up courage, and determined to give them all bold words.
-So he walked up to the stranger, and said—</p>
-
-<p>‘“Well, I did heave you a rope; no true-hearted
-mariner would see a man adrift upon the ocean, and not<span class="pagenum" id="Page_76">[Pg 76]</span>
-offer him rescue. I care little what you be. If you are
-our fellow-creature, we have done but our duty in saving
-you; if you be not, why, we are honest men here, having
-no crime upon our consciences, and we defy the devil and
-all his works. Come, shipmates, lend a hand, and heave
-the old gentleman’s barge aboard. It’s the captain’s
-orders, and orders must be obeyed.”</p>
-
-<p>‘And so, after a little grumbling and murmuring, the
-boat was hove aboard and placed between the masts.
-There was neither food nor water in her, and her bottom
-was as foul with barnacles and sea-weed as if she had
-drifted ten times round the world. Meantime, the
-stranger and the captain went below, and the men stood
-in a group round the cabin, but they could hear nought
-of what took place there, and presently they retired to
-their usual posts. Well, Ned Purvis was in the first
-watch, and when it got dark he was standing leaning
-against the main-chains, wondering at the strange event of
-the day, when the captain touched him on the shoulder.</p>
-
-<p>‘“Nevvy!” says the old man, “know you whom you
-have brought aboard into this ship?”</p>
-
-<p>‘“Why, uncle,” answered Ned, somewhat taken aback
-at this address, “ought we not to take aboard any man
-we find starving in a boat upon the ocean, more than a
-week’s sail from land?”</p>
-
-<p>‘“Ay, Nevvy,” quoth the old captain, “any man, but
-not any phantom; it is more than a hundred years since
-the passenger you brought on board this unhappy ship
-was a man!”</p>
-
-<p>‘“Do you know him, then, uncle?” says Ned; “have
-you ever seen him before?”</p>
-
-<p>‘“Ay, boy,” replied the old mariner; “once, when I
-was a youth, he boarded a ship in which I sailed, as he
-did ours to-day.”</p>
-
-<p>‘“And what did he?” asked the young sailor, his
-heart fluttering within him.</p>
-
-<p>‘“Raised storms,” said the elder Purvis, solemnly;
-“raised a tempest such as I never saw before, and had
-hoped, until now, never to see again.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_77">[Pg 77]</span></p>
-
-<p>‘“Then, in the name of God,” says Ned, clenching
-his fists, “as I brought him on board, I’ll pitch him
-overboard, and I’ll begin with his boat first.” And
-so saying, he began to make fast a tackle to the curled
-prow.</p>
-
-<p>‘“Hold, hold!” said Captain Purvis; “he must go by
-his own free will, or he will not go at all.”</p>
-
-<p>‘“But who—who, in the devil’s name, is he, uncle?”
-shouted Ned.</p>
-
-<p>‘“He is a restless phantom—a wandering, unquiet
-spirit,” says the old seaman, with his voice trembling,
-and his grey hair all dank with the cold sweat. “He
-was a cruel captain of Spain, who, holding a high
-command in Hispaniola, wrought great cruelties to the
-natives, and even to his fellow-countrymen, amassing thus
-a great treasure, which he buried in one of the small keys
-or desert islands of the Western Indies, to wait an
-opportunity of conveying it to Spain: at length this
-seemed to have arrived, and in a stout vessel he set sail
-for the treasure island; but on the voyage a terrible fever
-fixed upon him, and having partially recovered, he found
-his memory so gone that he could not recal to his mind
-any signs by which he knew either the island, or the part
-of it where the treasure lay. Notwithstanding, however,
-he would continue to cruize for weeks and weeks among
-the cluster called the Virgin Isles, to the east of Porto
-Rico,—never sleeping, so they said who sailed with him,
-but always standing on the highest yard, gazing wistfully
-for his treasure he had buried. At length his crew lost
-patience, and insisted upon returning to Hispaniola; at
-this he fell into furious fits of rage, but at last, they
-being obstinate, he swore a solemn oath that, dead or
-alive, he would sail the sea until his treasure was either
-found and spent, or placed for ever beyond the reach of
-men. And then, ordering them to put out a boat,
-stepped on board, and they left him floating, an hundred
-years ago, just as we found him this afternoon.”</p>
-
-<p>‘“But he has been seen since,” quoth Ned, after a
-pause, for he did not know what to think of this story.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_78">[Pg 78]</span></p>
-
-<p>‘“Twice that I know of,” said his uncle, “and once,
-I tell you, I saw him, and he came on board and brought
-tempest with him; they called him ‘Foul-Weather Don’
-and learned men say he must keep his oath, in the spirit,
-if not in the body, and that he will have no rest till the
-terms of it be fulfilled.”</p>
-
-<p>‘“So he brought bad weather, did he?” said Ned,
-musing.</p>
-
-<p>‘“For the three weeks he was on board,” says the
-old man, “the blast never lulled, and the sea ran higher
-than the mainyard.”</p>
-
-<p>‘“And what did he do all that time?” cries Ned, again.</p>
-
-<p>‘“He sat in the great cabin,” replied the uncle,
-“with his back against the rudder-case, and never spoke
-word nor broke bread.”</p>
-
-<p>‘“How did he leave you?” was Ned’s next question.</p>
-
-<p>‘“He rose one evening, just in the twilight, and
-ordered the captain to put his boat into the water, though
-none of us thought a boat would live in such a sea, and
-none built by man’s hand could. But that one”—and
-the old sailor pointed to the sea-worn craft, with her
-bottom one bed of weed and barnacles—“but that one
-floated like a duck upon the great breaking seas; and
-presently, with grave courtesy and farewell gesture, Foul-Weather
-Don stepped to the gangway, and from thence
-on board his skiff. We saw him once or twice rising
-on the tops of the great seas, and standing up in the boat
-with his hands clasped, as one praying; then boat and all
-disappeared, and we saw him no more. The next hour
-the gale broke, the sea went down, and we were again
-enabled to lay our proper course.”</p>
-
-<p>‘“And what is Foul-Weather Don doing in the cabin
-just now?” says Ned.</p>
-
-<p>‘“Sitting with his back against the rudder-case,”
-answered Captain Purvis; “and see—look there!” the
-old man added, and he pointed to the east, “look at that
-bank of clouds rising from the ocean—there’s the gale
-coming. Before midnight Foul-Weather Don will have
-all his winds blowing about him.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_79">[Pg 79]</span></p>
-
-<p>‘With this, mates, Ned Purvis walked away forward,
-and pondered long and deeply. The rest of the crew
-were whispering in groups upon the forecastle, and the
-poor old captain was standing wringing his hands beside
-the magic boat. So presently Ned spoke to two or
-three of the men, and they shook hands with him and
-promised to stand by him. Then he went down to his
-berth and took out a great pistol, and carefully examined
-the lock and cleaned it; afterwards he opened his chest,
-and produced from it a bright Spanish dollar; this he
-hammered into a round ball, and with it, instead of a
-leaden bullet, he loaded the pistol. So presently, armed
-in this fashion, he came on deck, the men following him
-by ones and twos, and marched right to the door of the
-great cabin. His uncle met him at the door. “What do
-you want here?” quoth the old man; “take my advice,
-and let him alone.”</p>
-
-<p>‘“No,” says Ned, “I brought him here, and I’ll make
-you rid of him;” and so saying, he put the old man aside,
-and entered the cabin. It was almost dark, but the light
-from the binnacle came down through the sky-light, and
-showed the strange passenger sitting there, as the captain
-had described, with his back to the rudder-case.</p>
-
-<p>‘Ned Purvis marched heavily in, and the phantom, or
-whatever it was, looked up at him, and so they remained
-for more than a minute staring into each other’s eyes.
-The men were watching them over each other’s shoulders
-at the door.</p>
-
-<p>‘“Foul-Weather Don,” says Ned at last, as bold as
-steel, “you’re more free than welcome.”</p>
-
-<p>The spectre took no notice.</p>
-
-<p>‘“I hove the rope to you,” says Ned, “and I thought I
-was doing an act of duty by my fellow-creature. But
-now, I hear, that there’s no living blood in your veins,
-and that you roam the ocean, bringing bad weather on
-the mariners you fall in with. That may be true, or it
-may not. If not, say so, and say who you are. If you
-be a shipwrecked man, you are welcome here; but if not,
-men have told me that a silver bullet can wound even a<span class="pagenum" id="Page_80">[Pg 80]</span>
-ghost, and if you do not speak in time, by God, there is
-a rare chance now of testing the truth of the saying.
-Answer!”</p>
-
-<p>‘And Ned cocked the great pistol and levelled at the
-strange passenger. The figure never moved a muscle of
-its wan stern face.</p>
-
-<p>‘“Take the dollar and my blessing with it, then,”
-shouted Ned, and he drew the trigger.</p>
-
-<p>‘The pistol exploded, and for a moment the cabin was
-so full of smoke, that they could not see what execution
-had been done. When the vapour cleared a little off,
-Foul-Weather Don was standing up, his stony eyes
-giving out their cold sparkle, more horribly than ever.</p>
-
-<p>‘“You gave me your benison,” he screeched out, “I
-give you my malison; and the executors and the tokens
-of it will follow you night and day, until either my fate
-or yours be accomplished. If you do not believe me, go
-on deck, look over either quarter, and see if I do not
-speak sooth.”</p>
-
-<p>‘These, mates, were the very words of Foul-Weather
-Don; for I have got all the conversations which relate
-to the matter by heart, as they were told to me. And so
-Ned and the rest of them being terribly startled, tumbled
-up on deck, one tripping up the other in their hurry;
-and the first thing they did was to stare into the sea,
-where the phantom had told them to look, when sure
-enough they saw the fins of two great blue sharks, awful
-monsters in size, keeping way steadily with the ship; and
-just as Ned came on deck, they gave a sort of frisky
-plunge in the water, as much as to say, “There <em>you</em> are—very
-good; and here <em>we</em> are.”</p>
-
-<p>‘To make a long story short, mates, before midnight,
-such a gale was blowing from the eastward, that there
-was nothing for it but to put the ship before the wind;
-and not only that day, but that week, and for three
-weeks after that, did the hurricane, for it was little else,
-continue, blowing the ship entirely out of her course,
-until at length, the captain and crew knew that they had
-sailed from near the coast of Africa to the coast of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_81">[Pg 81]</span>
-America, and that if the wind did not soon take off, they
-would be run plump ashore, either on the continent or
-one of the islands. Meanwhile Foul-Weather Don, as
-before, never rose from the cabin, nor broke bread nor
-spoke word. Indeed, if he were talkative, he had no one
-but himself to hold converse with; for captain, quartermaster,
-mates, and all, lived forward, and gave up the
-cabin to the phantom passenger. But Foul-Weather
-Don was not the only thing which stuck to the ship.
-The sharks kept way with her as steadily in the thundering
-gale as in the light breeze. The crew could see
-them occasionally, ploughing along in the troughs of the
-sea, one on each quarter, and keeping their places as
-exactly as if they were towing after the ship. Well, all
-hands got low and mopish. The old captain was fairly
-unmanned; and even Ned Purvis, dare-devil as he was,
-began to quail. At last, they knew by their reckoning,
-and by the look of the sky towards sundown, that they
-were approaching the land, and that one way or the other
-their fate would soon be settled. So one evening, the
-men were gathered in groups, watching the signs of the
-sky, and pointing out to each other right ahead the warm
-coloured clouds which sailors know hang over the land.
-The weather looked as wild as ever; the scud above flew
-even faster than the waves below; and you should have
-seen the battered look of the craft as she went staggering
-along, under a rag of canvas, which was becalmed every
-moment in the troughs of the sea. Indeed the ship
-looked almost a wreck. Her bulwarks had been washed
-away long ago, the hatchways were all battened down.
-Out of three boats she had carried, only one was left,
-being strongly lashed to the deck, while the sea-battered
-skiff of Foul-Weather Don, although there was not so
-much as a rope yarn to make it fast, had never budged
-for all the great seas, which had been for weeks rolling
-over and over the decks, so that the men were obliged to
-lash themselves to ringbolts, and to the masts, and never
-could light a fire, or wear a stitch of dry clothing.</p>
-
-<p>‘Well, as I was saying, the poor fellows were holding<span class="pagenum" id="Page_82">[Pg 82]</span>
-on as well as they could, and wondering where the ship
-and they themselves would be to-morrow by that time,
-when the two seamen, who were taking their turn at the
-helm ropes, gave a loud shout, and the rest turning about,
-saw Foul-Weather Don standing upon the deck.</p>
-
-<p>‘“He’s going—he’s going,” whispered old Captain
-Purvis. “The Lord hath preserved us in his great goodness.”</p>
-
-<p>‘Well, Foul-Weather Don looked eagerly about as if
-he expected to find his treasure island, and then he
-mounted the rigging—all the crew holding their breath
-and watching him—and gazed from the maintop long
-and sadly. At length, he made a sort of motion of despair,
-and came down to the deck, where he stood wringing
-his hands. All at once he turned to Captain Purvis, and
-motioned for his boat to be hoisted into the sea. In a
-minute, mates, the tackles were manned, and they let the
-skiff go smash into the water, with a surge that would
-have burst another boat into staves. But only the devil,
-mates, could swamp a craft like that; she floated alongside
-as light as a well-corked bottle.</p>
-
-<p>‘“Haul your wind, when the elements will allow you,”
-says the Don, quite solemnly.</p>
-
-<p>‘“Thank you for nothing,” quoth Ned Purvis. “I
-should think we would, when you have brought us across
-the ocean against our will.”</p>
-
-<p>‘But the spectre replied not a word, and seemed to
-glide rather than to clamber over the ship’s side into the
-boat. When he was fairly aboard, Ned Purvis bellowed
-out, “Take your sharks with you, Foul-Weather Don,
-they are fitter companions for you than for Christians.”</p>
-
-<p>‘But there was no reply, and in a minute the phantom
-and his boat glanced away from the ship’s side, and the
-last the crew saw of her was a black speck with a figure
-in it, in the very crest of a breaking wave. Just as this
-happened, and they were beginning to breathe freely, one
-of the men shouted “Land!” and sure enough the next
-time they rose upon a sea, they saw right in the glare of
-the setting sun the dusky coast line of an island. In an<span class="pagenum" id="Page_83">[Pg 83]</span>
-hour after, the gale broke, lulling fast, so that before
-midnight they had courses and stay-sails on the ship, she
-lying-to with her head to the eastward. You know,
-mates, that in hot countries it is up wind, up sea, down
-wind, down sea, so that by sunrise the next day there
-was nothing but a great smooth swell to show that a gale
-had just swept across the wide Atlantic. The first thing
-Ned Purvis did when he came on deck to take the
-morning watch, was to look over the quarter, and he
-confessed afterwards that his heart felt sick when he saw
-the two blue sharks still alongside swimming close to the
-surface. The other seamen saw the creatures too, and
-they looked at Ned, and whispered among themselves.</p>
-
-<p>‘Well, you may be sure that, after such a run as the
-ship had had across the Atlantic, she wanted refitting,
-and the crew wanted vegetable food, and rest; so that
-when the usual trade wind came to blow, and they found
-from one or two fishing canoes that they were amongst
-the most northern of the Windward islands, they cruised
-about, looking for a convenient beach to land at, and to
-refresh themselves. All this time, mates, the sharks
-kept their places as steadily as the very masts. Ned
-fished for them in vain. He even baited the hook with
-the choicest pieces of pork and beef aboard, but they
-would not as much as push the morsel with their snouts.
-“No, no,” said the men, when they saw this; “the
-creatures have their orders, and they obey them.” Then
-Ned tried the harpoon, but though he had often speared
-porpoises and dolphins, he could not make a hit at the
-sharks; either the ship lifted or lurched, or the ravenous
-animals glided aside, or the water made the spear glance;
-but, however it was, Ned confessed that he could not
-even scratch their dingy backs.</p>
-
-<p>‘Upon this, there was little but black looks and murmuring
-words in the ship. Poor old Captain Purvis was
-at his wit’s end, and the crew, although they used to love
-poor Ned, now began to look at him as though he
-were a Jonas, and Ned knew it.</p>
-
-<p>‘“The curse,” said the men, “is following us in a<span class="pagenum" id="Page_84">[Pg 84]</span>
-visible shape. There can be no good luck for ship, or
-crew, or cargo, with such a couple of attendants swimming
-astern.”</p>
-
-<p>‘Well, Ned tried hard to laugh it off, but he could
-not succeed, and his arguments were of as little avail.
-“Why,” he would say, “they can’t jump aboard, messmates;
-the ocean is theirs as well as ours, and if a cat
-may look at a king, I don’t see why a shark may not
-look at a ship.”</p>
-
-<p>‘But though he spoke in this tone, I can tell you that
-Ned was but ill at ease himself. Well, this lasted three
-days, and all that time they were cruising about among
-the islands, looking for a place which would be snug to
-anchor in, and out of the way of Spanish ships. On the
-third day, when the ship was about a league from a small
-sandy isle or key, the men noticed that the sharks came
-closer to her than ever, as if they were getting more and
-more watchful of their prey. This made the pot boil
-over, and the boatswain and three-fourths of the crew
-went to the captain in a body, and said that Ned must
-leave the ship that hour, for that he was a doomed man,
-and that a doomed man made a doomed ship. There was
-land close to, they said. Mr. Purvis would get plenty of
-water and provisions, and he might soon get his passage
-off in another ship, but whether he did or not, he must
-go ashore now. Old Purvis tried to argue the thing,
-but the men would not hear his words, and in the
-middle of the hubbub, Ned comes forward, frankly, and
-says—</p>
-
-<p>‘“Messmates, I have brought misfortune on the ship,
-and spoiled the voyage; I am willing to land.”</p>
-
-<p>‘On hearing this, Captain Purvis wished to follow his
-nephew, but they would not let him because he was the
-only good navigator they would have, after Ned went
-away, in the ship. So, presently, the remaining boat
-was launched, and beef, and biscuit, and water, sufficient
-for two months at least, were put in her, with a musket,
-and ammunition, and a shovel, that Ned might have the
-means of digging for water. When the boat shoved off,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_85">[Pg 85]</span>
-the sharks followed, on which Ned, pointing to them,
-shouted to his uncle to be of good cheer, for they would
-meet again, and that the ship was now free of bad omens.
-The boat landed in a little cove, and Ned stepped on
-shore with his gun in his hand. The men placed his
-provisions and the shovel upon the beach, and shook
-hands with him; and as they rowed back to the ship,
-they gave him a cheer for his stout heart. Well, when
-they were gone, Ned began to look around him, and truly
-he was alone in a desolate place. Most of the island
-appeared to be sand, upon which, in some places, there
-were great banks of Bahama grass growing, and about a
-rood from him there was a little hill, with bushes in it,
-and one very old tree at the top. What rejoiced Ned,
-however, was to see plenty of turtles sleeping on the
-sand, and numerous birds. Well, he lived here nigh a
-fortnight, sleeping under a rock in a sort of cave, which
-was cool and pleasant, and looking out in vain for a ship.
-All this time the sharks kept cruising along the shore,
-and Ned used to amuse himself by flinging great stones
-on them from the top of rocks rising out of the sea. One
-day, however, having climbed the little hill, and sat
-down under the tree, he observed a curious thing. The
-tree, which must have been dead near a century, and
-which was all covered with moss, had several withered
-branches, to which cross pieces of wood had been rudely
-fastened, but in such a way that, unless you looked very
-closely, you would have thought that such was the
-natural growth of the tree. But at two hours, or thereby,
-after noon every day, these branches cast shadows as of
-six crosses, all in a circle on the sand. It was after Ned
-observed this that he climbed the tree, and found that
-the crosses were artificial. Then all at once it struck
-him that they were meant for marks, and then he thought
-that something might be buried there. Well, mates, off
-he goes for his shovel, and sets to work at once. It was
-hot work digging in that climate, but he very soon
-scraped the lid of a great chest made of ironwood, and
-bound with hasps and clasps of metal.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_86">[Pg 86]</span></p>
-
-<p>‘“By all the stars,” quoth Ned, “who knows but this
-is Foul-Weather Don’s treasure-chest.”</p>
-
-<p>‘Mates, I believe it was. Ned soon wrenched the lid
-off, and there he saw great ingots and rough lumps of
-gold, and precious stones, just as they were dug up from
-the mines in Cuba and Hispaniola by the Indians for the
-Spaniards. There they had lain for a hundred years, and
-no man the wiser or the better.</p>
-
-<p>‘“Aha,” says Ned, “I would fain have you in England,
-but what am I to do with you here?”</p>
-
-<p>‘However, he made shift to carry the wealth, lump by
-lump, down to his cave near the sea; then he brought
-the box, and stowed the gold as before, covering all over
-with loose sand. The very next morning, mates, Ned,
-on awaking, saw a small bark—he did not know what she
-was—becalmed, not a mile from the shore, waiting for
-the sea-breeze. So he mounted a rock, fired his gun,
-waved a handkerchief, and shouted. Presently, a boat
-pulled off from the bark, and Ned went down to the
-cove to meet her. There were a couple of men in the
-boat, of what nation I know not, but the vessel to which
-they belonged was a turtler, from one of the large windward
-islands—Martinico, I believe. So Ned told them
-that he had been marooned for striking the quartermaster
-of the ship in which he sailed, and asked them if they
-would give him a passage to any port where he could
-ship for England. So the turtlers consulted together,
-and asked him if he had wherewithal to pay his passage.
-Upon which Ned, who cared nothing at all for money,
-took them into his cave, and showed them the treasure-chest.
-At the sight of it the turtlers stared, as well
-they might, and most readily agreed to take off Ned
-and his gold at once. The three set to work, and presently
-the boat was loaded almost to the water’s edge
-with riches. The turtlers went about like men in a
-dream, and they were only roused from a sort of stupid
-bewilderment when they had rowed the boat out of the
-cove and found her so heavy that they feared she should
-be swamped by the heave of the sea.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_87">[Pg 87]</span></p>
-
-<p>‘“Lord!” says one of them, “see there; if the boat
-were to fill and go down. Did you ever see more fearful
-monsters?”</p>
-
-<p>‘And sure enough there were Ned’s old friends swimming
-on each side of the boat, as though they were appointed
-the guardians of the treasure. However, no
-accident happened, and as they neared the turtling ship,
-the sailors cried out that they were coming on board
-with treasure enough to buy a kingdom.</p>
-
-<p>‘You may think for yourselves, mates, how the entire
-crew of the bark, which carried about half-a-dozen men,
-received their freight. Ned told the simple truth as to
-how he had got it, and the turtler, immediately that the
-sea-breeze came, stood away for Martinico, the two
-sharks following as usual. Gold, mates, is a thing that
-makes demons out of men. The big chest stood upon
-the deck, and the crew hung round it, and would hardly
-work the ship. Presently they began to handle and
-weigh the lumps, and dispute about their value. Ned
-saw that a storm was brewing, and fearing that he would
-be stabbed or flung overboard to the sharks astern, so as to
-be no bar to a distribution of the wealth, stood forward
-and said that they were as much entitled to the gold as
-he, for if he had found it, they had given him the means
-of turning it to use. Well, at this speech they professed
-great satisfaction, and swore that Ned was an honest
-man and a good comrade, and that as he said, so it would
-be done. But it was clear that they all distrusted each
-other. Ned saw them whispering and caballing, and
-once or twice he observed a man concealing a knife in
-his garment, so that the haft came handy to his grasp.
-All this time the sharks were following steadily in the
-wake, and Ned did not like the look of the weather, for
-great black clouds were gathering in the sky. Still the
-men were looking sourer and sourer at each other, and
-gradually drawing off into two parties, one on each side
-of the chest, the twain watching each other warily.
-Ned tried to remonstrate with them, and told them that
-they ought to take in sail, for the weather looked threatening.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_88">[Pg 88]</span>
-But they ordered him to mind his own business,
-and said, they had not taken him on board to be captain
-over them. So Ned sat on the weather-bulwark, looking
-very uneasily to windward. Mates, you have all seen a
-squall in these seas, and you know how it comes. The
-weather getting very thick, the men forming each group
-began to whisper, and then, all at once, as if they had
-made up their minds, they gave a loud shout, and made
-a rush at the box; as they did so, they drew knives and
-snicker-snees, and cut and chopped at each other, struggling
-and cursing over the chest. Ned saw the blood
-splash down on the gold, and he rushed forward to separate
-them, crying out, “Madmen that you are—look out
-for the squall first and fight afterwards.”</p>
-
-<p>‘But it was too late, mates. The sky got black, and
-with a loud roar the squall came, tearing up the sea
-before it, and in the very centre of the flying foam Ned
-swore he saw Foul-Weather Don, with his arms stretched
-forth, as if in triumph. In an instant the blast struck
-the sails, heaving the turtler bodily on her broadside,
-and as she lurched over, the heavy box of gold fetched
-away with a mighty surge, and went crashing through
-and through the frail bulwark, and then with a great
-plunge down to the bottom of the ocean, there to lie,
-mates, even until the day when the sea shall give up its
-dead! All this passed in a moment, and the next instant
-the ship, as though relieved by having cast forth the
-guilty gold, righted with a heavy roll, which sent the
-seamen sprawling across the deck, with their knives in
-their hands, and bloody gashes in their faces and limbs.
-The squall was over, and the sun burst out; Ned rushed
-to the lee-beam, and saw, just where the gold had fallen
-into the sea, the bottom of a boat all covered with barnacles
-and sea-weed, which he knew well. She seemed
-now saturated and rotten with water, for the charm
-was off her, mates; and while Ned gazed at her, she
-went gradually down into the great depths of the sea, and
-the sharks sunk out of sight with her. As they disappeared,
-Ned felt a heavy load leave his heart, and he<span class="pagenum" id="Page_89">[Pg 89]</span>
-thought that he had got cheaply rid of it, even at the
-expense of the gold. The curse was taken off him, and
-he rather surprised the turtlers, who were standing looking
-very like fools, by cutting a set of capers on the
-deck. The first thing they did was to try for soundings,
-but the line ran out every fathom, and the lead touched
-no bottom. So they lengthened the cord with every
-piece of loose rope in the ship, but the sea appeared unfathomable.
-The gold was sunk in a gulf from which no
-power of man could raise it; and so at length, mutually
-cursing and blaming each other, they wore the ship
-round, and stood back to pursue their turtling cruise.
-From that time to this, mates, no mariner has ever seen
-Foul-Weather Don. Ned Purvis got safely back to
-England, and, as I informed you already, he told this
-tale, aboard the Bristol ship, to him who made it known
-to me. Regarding its truth, I leave every man to judge
-for himself.’</p>
-
-
-<hr class="r10">
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_IX">CHAPTER IX.<br><br>
-<span class="fs80">THE AUTHOR, WITH SUNDRY OF HIS COMRADES, SET OUT FOR THE</span><br>
-<span style="margin-left: -3.5em;" class="fs80">CREEK WHERE HE LEFT HIS BARK, AND THERE BRAVELY</span><br>
-<span style="margin-left: -16em;" class="fs80">CAPTURE A SPANISH SCHOONER.</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p>Nearly a month passed away since the evening on which
-I listened to the story of Foul-Weather Don, and no
-ship had yet passed within a dozen miles of the mouth of
-the bay. So all hands began to grow very impatient,
-and divers schemes were proposed, such as shifting our
-quarters to some other point of the coast, where we
-might have better luck. It was then that I, for the first
-time, called to mind the boat which I had left in the
-creek, where I first landed on the island. Now, as I had
-heard many stories of buccaneers putting to sea in boats
-or canoes, and boarding and capturing Spanish vessels, it
-occurred to me, that if we could get possession of the
-Frenchman’s skiff, we could divide our party between it
-and the canoe, leaving ample room for the stowage of
-provisions and water for a cruise. This scheme I imparted<span class="pagenum" id="Page_90">[Pg 90]</span>
-to Stout Jem, by whom it was received with
-approbation. We were nine in number, well armed,
-and therefore of quite sufficient force to capture any
-Spaniard, not a man of war, which we were likely to fall in
-with. It was therefore resolved that Le Picard, one of
-our Frenchmen, Blue Peter, and Nicky, should start,
-under my guidance, for the cove to the westward, and if
-we found the boat, should navigate her round the coast to
-the bay, where the rest of the party would be prepared
-with provisions and water, ready to stow on board, so
-that, in company with the canoe, we could put to sea at
-once. No time was lost in putting the scheme into execution.
-Meinheer, who knew something of sail-making,
-cut out a small square sail or lug, which we were to carry
-with us, and which would suit the boat, it being easy for
-us to cut and fashion a mast and yard after we had
-found her. We also carried a good-sized keg for water,
-and a small quantity of beef and cassava bread, trusting
-chiefly, however, to our guns for our subsistence.</p>
-
-<p>We set out by moonlight, intending to sleep during
-the heat of the day; and after an hour’s trudge through
-the wet grass and bushes, which were quite drenched
-with the copious dews, passed the spot where lay the
-Buccaneers who had been hanged by the Spaniards.
-Truly our poor comrades slept in a tranquil resting-place—a
-spot of greenest grass, with feathery palms overhead,
-bending and rustling in the night wind. We stopped to
-rest, when the sun rose, until the sea-breeze should set
-in, watching its coming from beneath a thick mango-tree,
-whence we could look down upon the blue sea
-beneath. After the land-breeze flickered and failed, there
-was a pause, during which the sun shone with blistering
-power. Then, far off, on the glassy surface of the sea,
-came the dark belt of roughened water, streaked with
-white, which proclaims the daily return of the brisk
-north-westerly trade, and in half an hour more, it was
-whistling through the bushes in half a gale of wind. We
-dined this day by the little runnel where I had killed the
-duck, and then travelled until sunset, when we encamped<span class="pagenum" id="Page_91">[Pg 91]</span>
-in our blankets, well worn out by our long day’s march.
-The journey to the cove was fatiguing, but performed
-without any particular adventure. We sometimes saw
-wild cattle, and heard the cry of wild dogs, and I observed,
-when we got glimpses of the sea, numerous great brown
-pelicans, flapping heavily over the water, somewhat like
-the cranes on our own coasts, and often diving down with
-a splash into the sea after the fish, which they mark from
-a great height. In the afternoon of the second day, I
-reckoned that we could not be far from the cove, but the
-exact spot was difficult to hit, as the general appearance
-of the coast hereabouts was very similar, and the tangled
-growth of underwood prevented us from always keeping
-so close to the edge of the sea-cliff as we otherwise should
-have done. We had trudged along all the afternoon,
-keeping a sharp look-out, and sometimes forcing our way
-with our great knives through the creepers and brushwood,
-so as to be able to gaze down the iron-bound sea
-wall to where the great driving swells were rising and
-sinking upon the rock, and foaming furiously over every
-projecting peak and pinnacle of stone; when, having
-stopped to hold a consultation—for I was now becoming
-very fearful that we had overshot our mark—we all suddenly
-heard the report of a musket or fowling-piece, fired
-not far off. This terribly disconcerted us, for we knew
-that the cove could not be distant, and we feared that the
-secret of its existence was not known to me alone. However,
-we withdrew into the thicket, where we could not
-well be discovered, and lay close. In the course of the
-next hour, we heard three shots fired from different points
-around us, and discoursed eagerly as to whether they
-were probably Buccaneers, or Spaniards who were hunting
-in the neighbourhood. At all events, we now
-despaired of recovering the boat, inasmuch as the great
-chance was that the hunters had landed in my cove, as
-I called it, and would, of course, appropriate the skiff, if
-she still lay there, to their own purposes.</p>
-
-<p>While we were talking lowly among ourselves, Blue
-Peter, the Mosquito-man, suddenly started up on his<span class="pagenum" id="Page_92">[Pg 92]</span>
-knees, and told us to listen. We did so, very intently,
-and presently heard a rustling and a snapping of dry
-twigs in the wood, but although we looked with all our
-eyes, we could see nothing.</p>
-
-<p>‘Tush!’ says Nicky; ‘you are a fool, Peter! and take
-a wild pig for a Spaniard.’</p>
-
-<p>But the Indian seized his piece, cocked it, and suddenly
-levelling it, fired, before we could prevent him.</p>
-
-<p>‘Hush!’ quoth he, very earnestly—‘hush! and we will
-be safe.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Safe!’ said Nicky. ‘Why, if they are Spaniards, they
-will be down upon us in a twinkling.’</p>
-
-<p>‘No,’ replied the Mosquito-man—‘no, no! They
-shooting all round: think my gun one of their camarados—eh?’</p>
-
-<p>‘The man is right,’ said Le Picard. ‘But what, in the
-name of the diable, have you fired at?’</p>
-
-<p>‘Me show you!’ said Blue Peter; and he crawled into
-the underwood so circumspectly, that one scarcely heard
-a rustle, and presently, returning, flung the body of a
-huge dog among us.</p>
-
-<p>‘A Spanish blood-hound!’ exclaimed Nicky; and we
-all recognized the fawn colour, with grim, black muzzle,
-and the great muscular limbs of the animal. But to put
-all question aside, the creature wore a leather collar, with
-a brass plate, on which was inscribed the name, ‘Manuel
-G. Alcansas,’ so it was quite clear, that we were surrounded
-by a hunting party of the enemy, and that, had it not
-been for the keen eye of the Indian, who observed the
-blood-hound, and shot it almost when it was in the act of
-giving tongue, we should probably have been massacred.
-We were all tolerably startled, and, after a hurried consultation,
-agreed that we might as well lie close where we
-were, as attempt to shift to less dangerous quarters, as by
-moving we might unwittingly run into the very jaws of
-death. At last we decided to climb up certain trees,
-the branches whereof interlaced, Blue Peter having first
-cut the throat of the dog, and scattered the blood
-copiously around, so that it would embarrass and destroy<span class="pagenum" id="Page_93">[Pg 93]</span>
-the scent of any other hound which might pass that way.
-He then flung the body up into the branches of a tree.
-Not long after we heard a voice hallooing loudly, as we
-supposed for the slain dog, and some other shots were
-fired at a distance. However, the sun sank and the stars
-shone down through the leaves, and we still remained
-unmolested. Making ourselves as comfortable as our
-position would permit, we munched our supper, of which,
-however, we could eat but little, for we suffered much
-from thirst. Fortunately, there was water enough in the
-keg to afford us a few mouthfuls a piece, but we were
-afraid to straggle abroad in search of more. With the
-grey dawn we were afoot, cautiously exploring the locality,
-and I had much ado to restrain a sudden burst of
-exclamation when I recognised the little hill, to the top
-of which I had climbed to look around, after scrambling
-up the precipitous banks of the cove. I now knew
-whereabouts we were, almost to a yard, and carefully
-guiding the rest, and taking great heed to make no noise,
-we made our way to the top of the very scaur or ravine,
-up which I had crept from the water. It was not easy,
-however, to make out whether the cove was empty, for
-the morning was yet dim and grey, and the trees grew
-thick below. We proceeded, however, moving in single
-file along the edge of the rock, which, as the reader remembers,
-was thickly covered with wood, such as bushes
-and parasitical plants, with great trees growing out of
-the rifts and cracks in the cliff, and bending over the
-water so that the branches of those on both sides interlacing,
-quite canopied the still deep sea beneath. As we
-clambered on by the edge of the precipice, a sound suddenly
-struck my ear with which I was too well acquainted
-to be easily deceived—it was the flap of canvas. Nicky
-heard it as well as myself, and we all paused. The land
-wind was just beginning to die out, and only came in
-heavy dank puffs down from the hills. We waited for the
-next gust; it shook the dew from the branches in a great
-sparkling shower, and gave a great rustle, as it were, down
-the ravine, in the middle of which, we again heard the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_94">[Pg 94]</span>
-flap of canvas, and a rattle as of reef points against a sail.
-Being guided by the sound, we proceeded a few paces
-onwards, and then coming to a comparatively clear bit of
-ground, we crawled upon our bellies to the edge of the
-cliff, and through the trees and boughs saw a small vessel
-with two masts, of the class called schooners, beneath.
-She was moored in the very centre of the cove, very
-snugly, being made fast by four hawsers, two a-head and
-two astern, to the trunks of trees growing near the water
-on either bank. She had two boats in the water, floating
-by her main chains, and one of them I immediately recognised
-to be the object of our journey. Here, then, was
-the vessel to whom the hunters, whose guns we had
-heard, evidently belonged: and, indeed, without other
-evidence, Nicky and Le Picard knew enough about the
-fashion of those seas to be sure that the schooner was
-Spanish built, she being, possibly, a fishing vessel from
-Cuba, although what she did on the coast here, we could
-not well imagine. The question now, however, was how
-we were to act? Thinking themselves, no doubt, in
-security, there was not a single man awake upon deck;
-but several stout fellows were lying asleep under canvas
-and tarpaulins upon the forecastle. Presently, after we
-had gazed our fill upon the schooner, Nicky asked our
-opinion as to whether it would be possible to clamber
-down to the water’s edge, and make off with both boats
-before the crew awoke. But Le Picard thought the risk
-too great. Besides, he argued, when they miss the boats,
-they can chase us out to sea in the schooner, where we
-would infallibly be taken. While they were talking, I
-was turning over another plan in my own mind.</p>
-
-<p>‘Instead of taking the boats,’ quoth I, ‘why should we
-not take the ship?’</p>
-
-<p>At this they all started, and reminded me that we
-were but four men, whereas the Spaniards might well be
-a dozen; and they had dogs, too, fierce bloodhounds, of
-which Le Picard, in particular, professed a great horror.</p>
-
-<p>‘Look you,’ quoth I, ‘this is my plan. Yesterday the
-Spaniards were hunting ashore, and to-day it is very like<span class="pagenum" id="Page_95">[Pg 95]</span>
-that they will renew their pastime, leaving, perhaps, only
-one man, or perhaps not even that to take charge of the
-schooner; for you see that she is moored very safely, and
-with her bows pointing down the creek so as to be ready
-for a start. Now, look at her rigging; see, her jib can
-be hoisted in a moment, and her fore and mainsails can
-be set merely by letting go the brails, and running aft
-the sheets; for you observe that the gaffs are already
-hoisted, therefore the schooner is ready for sea. Now I
-know, in a general manner, the direction of the cove
-below. It runs for a little way parallel to the coast, and
-then turns to the right, and so opens up into the sea.
-What is there to prevent us boarding the schooner when
-she is left almost, if not quite, undefended, and so carrying
-her away?’</p>
-
-<p>They all applauded this design, and the more we
-talked of it the better it seemed to be. The schooner
-was a trim-looking vessel, such as the Spaniards can
-build very well, and we judged from her shape that she
-was exceeding fast as well as easy to manage. Besides,
-the greater length of the cove running westward, what
-puffs of sea-breeze traversed it would be in our favour,
-and although there would necessarily be some risk when
-we had passed the elbow, and came to get the ship out in
-face of the swell, yet we determined at all events to
-make the experiment. Nothing venture nothing have,
-so we shook hands gaily, and thanked our stars for such
-a slice of good luck.</p>
-
-<p>As in many other adventures, the first and most difficult
-duty which we had to perform was to wait, so we
-ensconced ourselves in thick bushes, where we could see
-without being easily discerned, and watched the Spaniards
-as keenly as hawks do larks. The sun was above the
-horizon about half-an-hour, when a man issued from the
-cabin, and tapped the deck loudly with a handspike. At
-this summons the sluggards on the forecastle began to
-stir themselves, and to crawl forth, one by one, yawning
-from under the sails, and presently three or four bloodhounds,
-who seemed to have been sleeping among them,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_96">[Pg 96]</span>
-came whining and stretching themselves from their warm
-nests. The man who had wakened the rest, then went
-round the schooner, and appeared to examine the state
-of the moorings. The aspect of things seemed to satisfy
-him, for he went below, and presently the crew had their
-breakfast, which they ate on deck—a couple of bowls of
-cocoa, or some such beverage, being carried aft to the
-cabin. Soon after this, we observed, with great delight,
-a number of muskets and pistols brought on deck, at the
-sight of which, the grim bloodhounds yelped and bayed.
-The captain, as we called him then, appeared again; and
-after a long discourse, carried on with a great deal of
-gesticulation, the whole crew gathering round and handling
-the arms, the bloodhounds were fed, and the skiff—my
-skiff—hauled alongside, no doubt to convey the
-hunters on shore. The captain then seemed to be giving
-orders to one of the crew, a stout fellow, who wore a
-great striped woollen cap and had a long unsheathed
-knife in his girdle, and then the whole party, excepting
-the fellow with the knife and cap, tumbled into the
-boat, the bloodhounds leaping in along with them, and
-rowed towards the extreme head of the creek. The
-Spaniards numbered about a dozen, without including a
-boy whom they had with them, and of course weighed
-down the skiff until her gunwale was almost at the
-water’s edge. We were for a little time in some
-perturbation, lest they should chance to come our way.
-We heard them shouting, and laughing, and crashing
-through the boughs, as they made their way up the steep
-banks of the creek, and then the boat came floating down
-again to the schooner, with the boy paddling her. Meantime,
-the man with the striped cap had disappeared in a
-little cook-house or caboose, from the funnel of which a
-smoke began to rise; and the boy, having made fast the
-boat, went aft to the cabin, and presently returned with
-the bowls, which we had seen carried thither, empty.
-Now, as we had seen but one man come out of this cabin,
-and as breakfast had been served there for two, we considered
-that there were three persons left in charge of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_97">[Pg 97]</span>
-the ship, but that one of these was probably sick or
-disabled. While we were making these observations,
-the reader may be sure that we also listened attentively,
-in order to find out in what direction the hunting party
-had proceeded; and presently, hearing shouts and the
-reports of guns very faintly, and gradually becoming
-more so, until they were no longer audible, we congratulated
-ourselves that the hunters were out of the way,
-and that so far, our task would be easy.</p>
-
-<p>The next point was, how to get on board the schooner
-so suddenly and so quietly as to leave those in charge
-of her no opportunity of giving an alarm. First we
-thought of swimming, but Le Picard was not skilful at
-this exercise; and, besides, we saw the backs and snouts
-of several caymans, moving about in the water. Then
-Nicky proposed to swing ourselves aboard, by means of
-the warps, fixed to the trees; but on close examination,
-we found the banks so precipitous, that it would be very
-difficult to make our way to the ropes, without giving an
-alarm. We were thus in considerable perplexity, fearing
-our scheme would miscarry in the very outset, when I
-observed a means whereby we might, although at some
-risk, accomplish our end. I have said that the cove or
-creek was so narrow that the branches of the great trees,
-growing in the refts of the rock on either side, met and
-interlaced, and from these branches hung perpendicularly,
-like great ropes, many long tendrils or withes,
-very tough and strong. Now, as it chanced, one of these
-depending from a stout branch, swung close by the fore-top-mast
-head of the schooner, dangling indeed to the
-cross-trees. I pointed this out to my comrades, and
-they all agreed that it would be very possible to clamber
-out upon the bough, and slide down the withe into the
-rigging; but that the deck must be clear when we made
-the attempt, otherwise we could not fail of being discovered.
-It was fortunate, therefore, that the man with
-the striped cap continued in the cook-house, where we
-heard him clattering amongst pots and pans, and concluded
-that he was preparing a meal for the men ashore. But,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_98">[Pg 98]</span>
-as Nicky said, when one cooks a dinner, one never knows
-who may eat it. The boy remained about the deck for
-some time, but at length went into the cabin, and, staying
-there, we concluded to make the venture. Fastening
-our guns across our shoulders, we again shook hands,
-and vowed to stand by each other to the death. Then
-we crept cautiously along, until we came to the tree,
-from which sprang the great branch, which we looked to
-be the first stage of our journey to the schooner’s deck.
-This tree grew about a fathom beneath the edge of the
-rock, but it was easy to swing ourselves down to it, by
-the matted vegetation, which clung to the face of the
-stone. Then, one after another, we crawled out upon
-the bough, which shook a little, but bore us bravely.
-The schooner was now right below, and not a living
-thing stirring on her decks. I was the first man, and
-Nicky was at my heels. The Indian came next, and the
-Frenchman brought up the rear. All of us whites being
-sailors, the feat was not difficult; and as for the Mosquito
-man, he could climb like a cat. Having satisfied myself
-that the withe was well attached to the bough, I first
-twined my legs round the former, and then grasping it,
-slid easily down, until my feet touched the cross-trees of
-the Spanish schooner, and in a moment my comrades
-were clustering around me, no alarm being as yet excited.
-After pausing a moment, to get firm grips of the stays, I
-gave the word, and the whole four slid like lightning
-down the ropes, hand over hand, as sailors say, and came
-with a great bounce upon deck together. Le Picard
-instantly leaped to the cook-house, and the Spaniard
-coming out at the same moment, the Frenchman dealt
-him a blow with the butt-end of a heavy pistol, which
-flung him backwards, quite stunned upon the deck, while
-Nicky and I ran to the cabin, meeting at the threshold,
-the boy, and a comely woman, very dark, and with the
-blackest eyes I ever saw, who directly set up a great
-shriek of dismay.</p>
-
-<p>But Nicky and I, pointing to the cabin and drawing
-forth pistols, made them understand that they must go<span class="pagenum" id="Page_99">[Pg 99]</span>
-below and be silent, as they valued their lives. The boy
-slunk back directly, and the woman turned to a livid
-paleness, and, swooning away, would have fallen down
-the ladder, but we supported her and laid her on the
-cabin floor; then, directly running on deck, we shut
-down the hatch. All this hardly occupied a moment;
-and, seeing Le Picard and Blue Peter cutting the warps
-forward, we drew our knives, and, working with good
-will, soon severed the tough piles of hemp, aft, and the
-schooner was unmoored. We waited a moment with
-great impatience, to see if she would drift, but, remaining
-stationary, we ran up the jib, and slackened the
-brails of the mainsail, so as, without actually setting the
-sail, to expose a good breadth of canvas, but it hung idly;
-the sea breeze had not yet set in, or if it had it did not
-reach us in the depths of the creek. We therefore flung
-a long line into the lightest of the two boats alongside,
-and Blue Peter and Nicky leaping into it, pulled with
-all their strength for the elbow at which the creek tended
-seawards, and made the line fast to a tree there, while
-Le Picard and I hauled upon the warp, and soon saw
-that the schooner was obeying the impulse thus given to
-her, and slowly moving through the water. In a twinkling,
-our comrades leaped on board again, and added
-their strength to ours, all of us working with clenched
-teeth and breathless eagerness. Just then, turning to
-look at the wounded Spaniard, who was sprawling upon
-the deck, I felt a breath of cool air on my face, the jib-sheet
-rattled, the light canvas swelled out, and in a
-moment the mainsail moved out of its sleepy folds, and
-the warp upon which we were hauling slackened. The
-schooner felt the puff, and I ran aft and took the helm,
-steering her in close by the starboard shore, which, when
-we turned seawards, would be the weather side of the
-cove. The mingled trees and rocks seemed to glide
-away from us. I looked over the side, and saw the
-bubbles rippling in the transparent water; and as I lifted
-my head again, I started with delight to feel the first
-heaving of the schooner, as she began to meet the lazy<span class="pagenum" id="Page_100">[Pg 100]</span>
-swell. The elbow, or turn of the creek, was not more
-than the length of the schooner ahead of us, and my
-three comrades all ran to the bows to watch the depth of
-water, and shouted that we might graze the rocks.
-Therefore I ported my helm, so as to send the vessel
-close in, and just as we slowly opened the corner I put
-the tiller hard down, and being fortunately a very handy
-craft for steering, she gradually swung round, and we all
-uttered a shout together as we saw, at the end of a short
-rocky passage, the open sea, streaked with the white bars
-of breaking waves. But we were not out yet: almost
-immediately on rounding the point of the creek a gust of
-the sea breeze struck us on the starboard bows, making
-the jib rattle and flap like thunder, and directly the head
-of the schooner fell off towards the rocks on the leeward
-side. The Frenchman exclaimed that we must take to the
-boats after all, but Nicky answered him, “Yes—but only
-to carry a warp to the rocks at the mouth of the creek!”
-No sooner said than done. Another line was flung into
-the skiff, and Nicky and the Indian went with three strokes
-to the weather extremity of the creek. Here the surf was
-beating violently, coming with great lashing surges round
-the corner of the cliff, and causing the water to rise and
-fall more than a fathom with every undulation of the sea.
-Here was a jagged pinnacle of rock beaten by the waves,
-which every now and then burst right above it; over
-this the Indian with great dexterity cast a loose hitch of
-the line, while we on board, running to the schooner’s
-bows, hauled upon it as before. It was lucky for us that
-the sea-breeze only blew up the ravine in uncertain puffs,
-and that the place was full of counter-currents, and
-eddies of air, which first filled our sails one way and then
-another, as we heaved and rolled upon the broken swells
-which dashed from side to side of the channel. We
-worked at the warp like desperate men, as, indeed, we
-were. Every now and then a sudden toss of the water
-would fling us back; but then the counter reflection of the
-seas from the opposite wall of rock would jerk us forward,
-and we soon found that we were gradually making our<span class="pagenum" id="Page_101">[Pg 101]</span>
-way towards the mouth of the cove, keeping so close to
-the weather side, that every now and then the masts,
-when flung over to starboard, rattled among the bushes
-overhead, and sent down showers of leaves, which would
-fly in uncertain whirls and dives amongst the rigging.
-At last, the decisive moment came. In a minute we
-would be hove upon the leeward entrance of the cove, or
-be out clear at sea. I ran again to take the helm. Le
-Picard and the Indian, running to the weather fore-chains,
-gave a last surge upon the line by way of a launch.
-The schooner’s head plunged into the trough of the sea,
-not a fathom from the rocks, and as she rose—her bows
-drew beyond the shelter of the cove—the full blast of
-the sea-breeze caught her jib—and her head swung gain
-to leeward.</p>
-
-<p>‘Help her with the foresail, comrades!’ I shouted.
-They had anticipated me—the Indian letting go the
-brails, and then helping the whites to draw aft the sheet.
-The sail surged and flapped so as to shake the schooner
-to her very keel, and the great sheet-block jerked madly
-to and fro with bounds which would have dashed through
-a strong wall. But still, though they could not yet
-master the canvas, the schooner was not insensible to its
-lifting power, and I felt her, as she rose with her broadside
-to a great clear sea, gather way, and start as it were
-from under me. There was just a moment of terrible
-suspense. The masts bent to leeward until their trucks
-were within a couple of fathoms of the lee promontory.
-You could almost leap on the great rough masses of wet
-stone, which lay close abeam, and then in a moment the
-schooner rose to another sea, all three sails now bellying
-to the wind, and once more hove clear of the land,
-although I saw through the clear water a glimpse of reef
-under our counter, which the keel must have scraped,
-and although the head of the mainmast actually tore away
-the projecting branch of a great prickly bush which was
-waving and dancing in the wind.</p>
-
-<p>We were drawing our first deep breath after our peril
-when I heard a great shout above me, and starting round,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_102">[Pg 102]</span>
-I saw between me and the sky the figure of a man standing
-with a gun upon the very verge of the precipice
-which formed the line of coast. He directly fired his
-piece, and set up a loud outcry to his comrades, three or
-four of whom directly joined him, and fired a volley at us
-which did no damage. So we jumped up on the taffrail
-rail, and waving our hats, gave them a loud cheer, and
-told them that if they wanted their schooner, they might
-swim after us, and then we would consider the matter.
-They made violent gestures, but the sea-breeze blowing
-so freshly, carried back their voices, and we knew not
-what they said. Carrying on as we best could with our
-ill-set sails, until we had made a good half mile offing, we
-luffed the schooner up into the wind, and with some
-trouble, got the canvas properly extended; then pulling
-the helm hard down, we got the jib-sheet to windward,
-and so lay to, dancing and surging merrily upon the sea.</p>
-
-<p>And now we shook hands again, and embraced each
-other cordially. Here we stood on the deck of a fine
-schooner—our own by lawful capture from our enemies—and
-we thought of the surprise we would give our
-comrades in the bay. But the first thing to be settled
-was the fate of our prisoners, and we determined very
-unanimously that they must be put on board one of the
-boats, and left to find their way to the shore, Nicky only
-stipulating that if the lady should take a fancy to him,
-she should be allowed to remain on board. With some
-laughing at this proposition, we opened the cabin door,
-and called to our captives to come on deck, which they
-did, pale and trembling, for they seemed to expect no
-less than instant death. Nicky would be gallant to the
-lady, and to that end made her profound salutes, and
-spoke some gibberish, which he said was very good
-Spanish, for an expression of his admiration of her
-charms; but she never ceased crying out for ‘her husband—her
-husband,’ and begging, in the name of all the
-saints, to be put ashore. The boy, being more collected,
-managed to inform us—I, with my scanty knowledge of
-Spanish forming but a poor interpreter—that the schooner<span class="pagenum" id="Page_103">[Pg 103]</span>
-was called Nostra Senora del Carmine—that she had come
-to catch tortoise and to hunt wild cattle along the coast,
-it being the opinion of the citizens of Havannah, to
-which she belonged, that the late expedition had routed
-out all the privateersmen and hunters on the northern
-shore of Hispaniola. We then directed our attention to
-the man who had been acting as cook, and who, having
-partially recovered from his blow, was sitting up and
-looking very scared and foolish. However, his wits—if
-he had any—were still abroad, and we could not make
-him understand any of our questions; only when he was
-shown the boat with a couple of oars, and we pointed to
-the shore, and made as though we would push him over
-the side, he comprehended fast enough, and presently he
-and the boy got into the skiff belonging to the ship, and
-the lady, who had somewhat recovered her spirits, followed
-them, taking some clothing with her, and hiding
-her face as much as she could in a black veil. Although
-the sea was rough, they had a good boat and a favourable
-breeze, and we did not stand on our way until we saw
-them fairly into the shelter of the cove. Then we
-shifted the helm, let go the weather jib-sheet, and so
-began to plough our way to the eastward against wind
-and sea.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="r10">
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_X">CHAPTER X.<br><br>
-<span class="fs80">THEY RETURN WITH THE PRIZE TO THE MARMOUSETTES, AND<br>
-NICKY HAMSTRING SHORTLY RELATES HIS HISTORY.</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p>The wind blowing steady, the ship was easy to manage,
-so we speedily set to rummage our prize. Going into
-the hold, we found that she had little aboard save some
-campeachy-wood and some cocoa-nuts, and a couple of
-old brass guns, of about six pounds calibre, which seemed
-to have been put there for ballast. In the cabin was
-a good store of powder and lead for casting bullets, which
-was exceedingly valuable to us, and several long-barrelled
-muskets in good condition. The best part of the prize,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_104">[Pg 104]</span>
-however, was her storeroom, as it contained a great
-quantity of rope, canvas, and other things appertaining
-to the use of a ship. We also found a tool chest and a
-medicine chest, both of which were very welcome to us.
-In navigating the schooner, we, of course, divided ourselves
-into two watches—the larboard and the starboard
-watch, Nicky and I having the one, and Le Picard and
-the Indian the other. We also reefed our sails so as to
-have the ship snugger, and the better prepared for squalls
-should any happen. We made good progress that night
-when the land-breeze blew, and hoped next day, by
-evening, to observe the headlands of the Marmousettes.
-Catching sight, however, soon after sunrise, of a sail close
-in shore, and not wishing, in our weak condition, to be
-overhauled, we stood away directly to sea, so that, by
-noon, only the blue mountain ridges of Hispaniola were
-visible. In the afternoon we put about ship, and made
-again for the land. This long stretch caused us to lose
-much time, so that we had another night’s navigation
-before us ere we could work up to our bay. Nicky and
-I had the mid-watch. It was a glorious night. We were
-running five or six knots, with the cool land-breeze
-sighing in our sails. The heaven was one vault of stars,
-and, lying on deck wrapped up in folds of old canvas,
-while Nicky held the tiller beside me, I fixed my gaze
-upon the Southern Cross, that beautiful cluster of stars
-which shines only in the tropics, and which, appearing in
-the solemn and thoughtful night, always caused me to
-feel that I was in a strange part of the world, even more
-than the curious animals, and plants, and men, which one
-sees daily and ordinarily about one, when abroad. And
-yet, beautiful as the constellation was, methought it had
-less charms than the Plough, and the bright belt of Orion
-circling about the polar star, which I used to gaze upon
-in the long night-watches at home. As I thought of
-these, I thought of the old fisher-boat tossing upon the
-wild bay of St. Andrew’s, or lying stilly at her grapnel in
-the mouth of the Balwearie burn, while my mother and I
-sat with our palms mending nets upon the sand-hill in<span class="pagenum" id="Page_105">[Pg 105]</span>
-the sun. I think I would have been a great day-dreamer
-had I not led such a stirring life as kept my muscles
-busier than my brain; but on these quiet clear nights,
-aboard ship, when all was still, save the steady murmur of
-the wind, and the monotonous plunge of the vessel, as
-she breasted the ever-rolling seas—in these nights there
-is a witchery upon me, and I love to let my fancy carry
-me away, and surround me with old faces and old times.
-So now, being in this mood, I dreamed and dreamed with
-my eyes open, persuading myself that I was on board the
-Jean Livingstone again, and that we were jogging along
-the rocky coast of Forfar, until I actually started up,
-and looking at the shore to windward, thought that I
-could discover in the shimmer of the moon the tall white
-rock we called the Lady of Arbroath.</p>
-
-<p>‘Nicky,’ says I, being in this mood, ‘do you ever
-think of home?’</p>
-
-<p>‘That do I,’ he responded, ‘and hug myself that I am
-not there.’</p>
-
-<p>‘But is there no old place,’ quoth I—‘no old face you
-would wish to look on again?’</p>
-
-<p>‘Not a bit of it,’ he replied, ‘I am too happy here.
-We have a good ship, we have staunch comrades, we have
-prospect of wresting plenty of doubloons and pieces of
-eight from those rascally Spaniards. We have Jamaica,
-with all its taverns, and its dice, and its wenches, to help
-us to spend them; and besides all these, why, we have at
-this moment a steady land-breeze, which is sending us
-along at five knots, and a glass of good brandy, after a
-good supper, to keep out the marsh fever. What more
-can any man want?’</p>
-
-<p>‘Perhaps,’ quoth I, ‘you were not happy at home?’</p>
-
-<p>‘You have hit it there,’ replied my comrade. ‘No.
-My father was a stout king’s man—why he was so, I
-know not, for I am sure the king never did much for
-him. But poor dad got what brains he had knocked out
-at Naseby, and some time after my mother married old
-Ephraim Crotch, as bitter a Puritan as ever wore cropped
-hair and ass’s ears. Now I, being a youth of spirit, did<span class="pagenum" id="Page_106">[Pg 106]</span>
-in no ways take to my father-in-law—on the contrary.
-Well, I mocked his slang, and mimicked his snuffle.
-Many a time did he lay his staff across these shoulders—augh!
-they ache even now! The old frump—I hate the
-thought of him!—often hath he turned me out of doors,
-to sleep in the fields. Then have I peeped in at the
-lattice, and seen old square-toes snug in the chimney
-ingle. “Ha!” thought I, “my father’s bones would rattle
-in their grave could he but look in, and see you in his old
-oaken chair, whelp of the Barebones breed!” So you
-may believe that our house was a pretty place for
-bickering. I loved all that my stepfather hated. He
-said that music was devil’s screeching—ergo, I played the
-viol and the tabor till they were broken on my head. He
-denounced all diversion, swore that rope-dancing was a
-subtle device of the evil one, and that the bowling-alley
-was the highway to hell—ergo, did I frequent fairs and
-jovial meetings, where the bowls trundled, and wrestled
-many a fall, and grinned through many a horse collar. I
-promise thee, Will, I was not made for a Puritan, and so,
-at length, they having, by an ordinance of old Noll,
-hewed down our Maypole, I e’en laid a good thick splinter
-thereof across the back of my reverend stepfather, and
-marched from Cornwall for ever and a day.’</p>
-
-<p>‘To London, no doubt?’ quoth I.</p>
-
-<p>‘Even so,’ he said, ‘but there I found neither gold
-nor silver in the streets, and I lived for some months a
-very unedifying vagabond sort of life, knees and elbows
-being generally very bare, and stomach generally very
-hungry. At length, being hard driven, I e’en enlisted,
-though it went hard against my conscience, under Old
-Noll. Such drilling, such fighting, and such psalm-singing.
-The sergeant’s ratan was never off our
-shoulders, except when he was exhorting us in the pulpit,
-or standing on a horseblock, calling the royalists sons of
-Agag. So, this going on for some time, and I trying in
-vain to become a saint, for which I had not sufficient bad
-qualities, I e’en took leave to desert; and because the
-land was too hot to hold me, I became a mariner and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_107">[Pg 107]</span>
-went to sea. But at sea, Will, I saw one great sight, I
-saw the king land on the beach of Dover, and having
-long observed that seasons of rejoicing are seasons of
-hospitality, I treated my ship as I had done my regiment,
-and followed the royal train up to London. That was
-indeed a march. All the country flocked to the road to
-see the king come back to his own again. It was
-nothing but eating and drinking, and up caps, “Huzza
-for King Charles, and to the devil with the Rump!”
-Well, on Blackheath, near London, was drawn up my own
-old regiment. ‘Gad, the sun was on my side of the hedge
-now, for there stood our sergeant as grim as Beelzebub in
-the sulks, and I having many pottles of wine in me, gave
-a tug to his grizzled moustache, and asked what he
-thought of me for a son of Agag now. I warrant you
-Old Ironside used his halberd with very little discretion
-by way of reply, and so I came away with a bloody
-cockscomb. But all was one for that. Wine was a
-great balm, and I applied it plenteously; being indeed in
-a very loyal state of drunkenness for certain days, I know
-not how many, until, having a little recovered, I found
-myself in the filthy hold of a ship with other ragamuffins;
-some sober and weeping, some drunk and singing, and
-some ill with the small-pox and jail fever, raving and
-dying. Then I presently understood that all this goodly
-company was bound on a voyage to the plantations in
-Barbadoes—we having, it seems, signed articles to that
-effect, in consideration of certain small sums of money,
-which they told us we had received, and spent in drink
-very jovially, and as became stout-hearted fellows. I
-made a bold attempt to escape by knocking down the
-sentry at the hatchway, but all I gained by the proceeding
-was a pair of very heavy irons, which were put on near
-the Tower, and which were not knocked off until we were
-three days’ sail from Barbadoes. There I landed, and,
-being duly sold, was set to labour with sundry other
-companions in misfortune amongst the sugar-canes. In
-a few months I was one of a very few survivors, but being
-very weak and sickly from two fevers which I had, I was<span class="pagenum" id="Page_108">[Pg 108]</span>
-not very sharply looked after, and so I managed, without
-much difficulty, to smuggle myself on board a small bark
-bound for Jamaica, where I joined the “Brethren of the
-Coast,” and have lived a reasonably jolly life ever since.’</p>
-
-<p>This was Nicky’s story, and an adventurous one it was.
-While I was thinking of it, he began again—</p>
-
-<p>‘No, no—no England for me, while there are Spaniards
-to fight, good ships to sail in, and stout fellows to drink
-with in these bright Indian seas.’ And therewith,
-having taken a good draught of brandy, he burst out
-singing:</p>
-
-<p class="fs80 no-indent">
-‘Take comfort, pretty Margery, and swab away your tears,<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;Your sweetheart, Tom, has sailed among the gallant Buccaneers,<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;So dry your eyes, my Margery, your Tom is true and bold,<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;And he’ll come again to see you, lass, with glory and with gold,<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;For his comrades are the stoutest and the bravest in the land,<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;And there’s ne’er a Don came out of Spain will meet them hand to hand.<br>
-<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;So-ho! for pike and sabre cut, and balls about your ears,<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;’Tis little he must care for these, would join the Buccaneers!<br>
-<br>
-‘The man who lies at home at ease, a craven heart has he,<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;While there’s wild boars on the hills to hunt, and Spaniards on the sea;<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;So look alive my stately Don, for spite your thundering guns,<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;Your shining gold we’ll make our own, and eke your pretty nuns.<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;We’ll spend the first, and love the last, and when we tire ashore,<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;’Tis but another cruise my boys, and back we come with more.<br>
-<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;So-ho! for pike and sabre cut, and balls about your ears,<br>
-&nbsp;&nbsp;’Tis little he must care for these, would join the Buccaneers!’<br>
-</p>
-
-<p>‘Silence, silence, Nicky!’ said I, laughing; ‘you will
-awaken the watch below.’</p>
-
-<p>‘So be it,’ quoth he; ‘to listen to such a song is better
-than sleep. ’Tis a rare good one, and a rare fellow made
-it in Tortugas, one night when we were melting the last
-pieces of eight remaining after a cruise on shore. But
-you put me out. Hear the last verse—</p>
-
-<p class="fs80 no-indent">
-‘What though to peace in Europe, the Dons and we incline,<br>
-The treaty seldom has much force—to the south’ard of the line.<br>
-Here’s wassailing and fighting, the merriest of lives,<br>
-With staunch and jovial comrades, with sweethearts and with wives.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_109">[Pg 109]</span><br>
-We sweep the green savannahs, we storm the Spanish walls,<br>
-And we’re kings upon the water, by the grace of cannon balls.<br>
-<br>
-Then ho! for pike and sabre cut, and bullets round your ears,<br>
-’Tis little he must care for these, would head the Buccaneers!’<br>
-</p>
-
-<p>Next morning, after being becalmed as usual in the
-interval between the land breeze and the regular trade
-wind, we kept pretty close in with the coast, looking
-anxiously for our bay, and we even feared that we had
-overshot our mark; but about noon the well-known
-rocks became visible, and presently thereafter we dashed
-up the Marmousettes, wondering what our comrades
-would take us for. There was no English flag aboard;
-but thinking that the folks ashore would recognise the
-cut of the boat sail which we carried along with us, we
-hoisted that to the mainmast head, and with this strange
-standard flying approached the beach. We could see no
-change in the bay, and hoped to find our friends all well.
-Presently, as we were rounding a wooded point, and just
-opening the huts, a musket was fired ashore among the
-trees, and we heard the loud, hoarse voice of Meinheer
-shouting that a strange ship was in the bay. At this
-moment, doubling the little cape I speak of, and furling
-up our sails as well as we could, we descried the whole of
-our party running about in great commotion upon the
-beach, shouting to each other, loading their pieces, and
-hammering their flints. Thereon, we all gave a great
-cheer together, and showed ourselves conspicuously above
-the bulwarks; on which, we being immediately recognised,
-they answered our cheer with loud exclamations,
-and, running to the canoe, came alongside just as our
-anchor fell three fathoms deep upon the white sand.</p>
-
-<p>‘What ship is this?’ exclaimed Stout Jem, who was
-the first to leap upon deck.</p>
-
-<p>‘She was the schooner Nostra Senora del Carmine,’ I
-replied; ‘but now she is a bold privateer, and will, I
-hope, never hear a Spanish name again.’</p>
-
-<p>Then we related all the particulars of the schooner’s
-capture, and informed our comrades what a clever sea-boat
-she was, and how we thought that, were she well<span class="pagenum" id="Page_110">[Pg 110]</span>
-manned, we could not have a more proper ship for our
-purpose. And then we moored the schooner carefully,
-and Stout Jem inspected her both below and aloft very
-minutely, being exceedingly well pleased at the quantity
-of stores which were on board, and also at the smart
-appearance and weatherly look of our prize. So all the
-company being in high spirits, we set to work at once to
-victual the schooner, having ample supplies of provisions
-at hand, and into her we of course transferred what
-clothes and property of the kind we had saved from the
-attack upon the first settlement; and having finished our
-task by nightfall, the whole party embarked, and we
-towed the schooner to the middle of the bay, where we
-anchored, and Stout Jem then proclaimed that he meant
-to hold a grand sailing council upon deck. This is a
-ceremony always in use amongst the buccaneers, and at
-these consultations they settle the articles of the voyage,
-and assign to every man what his share shall be of the
-total amount of booty which may be captured.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="r10">
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XI">CHAPTER XI.<br><br>
-<span class="fs80">THE BUCCANEERS PRESENTLY SET SAIL IN THE SCHOONER FOR</span><br>
-<span style="margin-left: 1.5em;" class="fs80">JAMAICA, WITH A RELATION OF THE EVENTS WHICH HAPPENED</span><br>
-<span style="margin-left: -27.5em;" class="fs80">THERE.</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p>Behold us, then, seated in great conclave under an
-awning, which it was Stout Jem’s first precaution to have
-spread, as, the berths in the schooner being close and
-stifling, we desired to sleep in the open air. In such a
-case, the stretching of an awning preserves a crew
-from the fall of the unwholesome dews, and from the
-rays of the moon, which, mild and beautiful as they are,
-yet, by some hidden power, swell and distort the features
-of such as sleep with their faces unprotected from the
-baneful light. A sea-box put upon deck served as a
-table, and we sat on chests and coils of rope round it.
-The night was beautiful and serene. The land-breeze
-just murmured aloft, the sleeping water of the bay was
-dotted with the twinkling images of the stars, and all<span class="pagenum" id="Page_111">[Pg 111]</span>
-around the dusky hills flung their forest ridges high into
-the balmy air—wreaths of mist and vapour, like broad
-white ribbons, showing where the rich alluvial valleys
-and ravines clove the sweep of the wooded uplands.</p>
-
-<p>Two or three lanterns stood upon the chest, glimmering
-on the pans and pipkins wherein we held our punch,
-and the fiery red sparks beneath every man’s face gave
-note that we all loved to fortify our frames against night
-air by wholesome pipes and tobacco. So, presently,
-Stout Jem addressed us pretty nearly in this fashion:</p>
-
-<p>‘Well, mates, we sit on the deck of our own craft,
-lawfully won from those misbegotten Spaniards, by four
-brave men of our own party. Now, as the capture was
-made before we are afloat, the vessel, by the laws of the
-coast, belongs to our comrades who took her, and of
-course they must be paid duly, when the prize-money
-comes to be overhauled. Meantime, the question is,
-shall we straightway go to sea?’</p>
-
-<p>On this we all shouted—‘Yes, yes; a cruize, a cruize!’</p>
-
-<p>‘Good,’ continued Stout Jem, ‘I say, with you, a
-cruize. That being settled, there are other matters to
-consider. Here are no guns, either calivers, arquebusses,
-culverins, or falconets. To make booty of the rich
-Spanish galleons without cannon, is like trying to eat a
-lump of bull-beef without teeth. The two brass guns
-below may do in their way. For these we have, however,
-no carriages; and besides, we want a piece of far heavier
-metal. Another matter is, that on board here we have
-neither a surgeon nor a carpenter, although both we and
-our ship are likely to meet with plenty of hard knocks;
-and furthermore, to make a cruize successful—and as the
-old falconers were wont to say—to fly at game of the
-first head, we must have more men. Jack Spaniard does
-not always leave his ships defenceless, and his galleons
-have rows of teeth which bite sharply. My counsel
-therefore is, that we stand for Port Royal in Jamaica.
-On the way we may chance upon a something worth
-picking up, and once arrived there, we can fit out in
-good style, and take on board what men we please.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_112">[Pg 112]</span>
-Besides, there we can have a French commission, or
-Letter of Marque, the French being now at war with the
-Spanish. I know that the Dons have hung many of our
-brave comrades with their commissions about their necks,
-but still I approve of doing all things regularly and in
-order. Now, then, you have heard my advice—what do
-you say to it?’</p>
-
-<p>We replied, with great acclamations, that he had
-spoken very justly; that we had all confidence in his
-counsels, and that we created him captain of the expedition.
-After some further discussion, I was named quartermaster,
-I being a more experienced sailor than many
-older men; and to Stout Jem, or, as we now called him,
-Captain Jem, was given the charge of the larboard, and
-to me the charge of the starboard watch. This done, we
-re-christened the schooner—dashing a bottle of spirits
-upon her bows—and calling her the ‘Will-o’-the-Wisp.’
-We lay quietly at anchor that night, and weighing before
-dawn, the last of the land-wind carried us clear of the
-bay, and when the sea-breeze struck us next morning,
-we up helm, veered away the sheets, and stood away
-along the coast bound for Jamaica.</p>
-
-<p>How vast is the difference between beating to windward
-in a small vessel against a rough sea, and flying
-gaily on before wind and waves! Cape and headland,
-and bay and creek, appeared and disappeared, as the
-nimble Will-o’-the-Wisp went bounding on, kicked as
-it were by every foaming sea which rolled behind her.
-You may be sure that we kept a good look-out for
-the former owners of the schooner, as we ran just past
-the entrance to the cove, but no human form could we
-descry among the rocks and woods. Not very far to
-leeward, we however observed a boat, with a small
-clumsy sail, making her way along the coast; and, approaching
-a little nearer, I soon guessed that she was
-the boat of the Spaniards, which we had given up to
-them, and that they were probably risking the chances
-of a run to Cuba. To satisfy our curiosity, however, we
-kept slightly away and a cry soon overhauled the little<span class="pagenum" id="Page_113">[Pg 113]</span>
-craft. She had but four men in her, including he who
-seemed to have been the captain, and the woman. Their
-sail was a clumsy thing, made of hides and scraps of canvas,
-and useless for any other purpose than to drive
-before the wind. As we approached them, the captain
-got up and hailed us very vehemently in Spanish. The
-purport of his discourse, as I gathered it, being whether,
-after robbing him of his ship, we meant to run down and
-sink the boat. A movement of the tiller soon made him
-easy on that point, and he sat down doggedly, with his
-teeth clenched, scowling at us. The woman clung to
-him convulsively, and the three men lay stretched in the
-bottom of the boat, only showing their tangled hair and
-black eyes above the gunwale. Captain Jem, who as he
-was a brave man, was a kind one, told me to ask whether
-they needed any food or water, which I did; but the
-Spaniard only waved his hand impatiently, muttered
-somewhat about ‘<em>Perros Inglesos</em>’ English dogs; and one
-or two of the men clenched their fists at us over the side
-of the boat. All this, however, we could well afford to
-take in good humour.</p>
-
-<p>‘Well,’ quoth Captain Jem, ‘if they are well victualled,
-so are we; and if they won’t say aught to us, we
-have little that I know of to say to them. So, cast loose
-your brails, my sons, and let’s be jogging.’</p>
-
-<p>The sails, which had been partially furled, were accordingly
-reset, and in half an hour the boat was a speck on
-the horizon to windward. We ran through the strait
-which separates Hispaniola from Tortugas, near enough
-to the latter coast to see that there were long stretches
-of flat rich land washed by the sea, and high mountains
-beyond. We also saw a great many sails of small boats
-and barks coasting along, and innumerable canoes fishing.
-That same night we passed the north-eastern part
-of Hispaniola, and, directing our course towards the
-south-east, sailed straight for Jamaica. In the afternoon
-of the next day we sighted at a great distance the longest
-outlying point of Hispaniola, and in twenty-four hours
-thereafter, descried Cape Morant, in Jamaica; and coasting<span class="pagenum" id="Page_114">[Pg 114]</span>
-along the southern shore, which lies hereabouts, very
-rich and flat, with great peaks, called the Blue Mountains,
-in the distance, we descried at nightfall the glimmer
-of distant lights, which we knew to be those of Port
-Royal. Here is the principal harbour in the island—a
-very commodious and safe one—formed by a deep indentation
-in the land, like a gulf, and sheltered by a long
-spit or bank of sand, called the Palisades, on which
-the surf beats vehemently, while within the water is
-like a mill-pond. There is but one entrance, and
-that well fortified; and the town of Port Royal is built
-just beyond the inlet or passage from the sea. Although
-it was near midnight when we anchored outside, resolving
-not to enter until we had daylight to help our pilot,
-a canoe presently came alongside of us, manned by a
-couple of negroes, who were fishermen and pilots, and
-who offered us abundance of fish and fruit very cheap.
-These men managed their canoe like thorough seamen,
-and one of them we retained to take us in as soon as the
-sea-breeze should blow next morning.</p>
-
-<p>This fellow wore coarse canvas trousers, a striped shirt,
-and a great straw hat, and grinned and showed his white
-teeth, and rolled his eyes, and clattered in his gibberish
-fashion to all on board.</p>
-
-<p>‘Oh, me de best pilot in all Port Royal,’ he would
-say; ‘take in a king’s ship, big enough to put dis
-schooner in him pocket, and never rub him keel. No,
-no, massa, Dick Canoe,’ for so he called himself, ‘de
-best pilot in all de island, and bery much esteem and
-respect by all de merchants, officers, and gentlemen privateers.’</p>
-
-<p>On asking him for news, he told us that many privateers
-were in the harbour, and that their crews having
-had reasonably good luck in an expedition to the
-main, were spending their money in the usual fashion
-ashore; information which pleased us the more, as we
-would probably have our pick and choice of good men.
-So next day we ran in among very intricate sand-banks,
-which lie at the mouth of the harbour, and presently<span class="pagenum" id="Page_115">[Pg 115]</span>
-saw the houses of Port Royal, with hundreds of artificers
-labouring to construct forts and bastions and such works
-around them, disposed so as to command the entrance to
-the harbour completely. Inside, in the smooth water,
-rode many brave merchant ships and certain smaller
-barks, which, I believe, had often brought destruction
-upon the Spanish towns of the main; but these last
-seemed empty, except a negro or two left in charge of
-them, all hands being carousing on shore. We dropped
-our anchor in a suitable place, and cast lots who should
-remain on board to take charge of the schooner, while
-the rest went into the town. The die fell upon Black
-Diamond, and the Mosquito men stayed on board voluntarily,
-intending, however, to put off in a canoe during the
-day to strike fish upon the sand-banks and the little
-islands near the Palisades. Captain Jem, Nicky, and
-myself went ashore in the pilot’s canoe, meaning to make
-the necessary arrangements for the further prosecution
-of our voyage. We found Port Royal very bustling and
-busy. As I have said, the people were occupied in
-building great fortifications, under the direction of officers
-in the English uniform, some of the workmen being,
-as we heard, criminals, others negro slaves, and the rest
-free labourers, either white or black. On the beach,
-great crowds of negroes were rolling down casks to the
-water’s edge, or along the wharfs, where the boats of the
-ships in the harbour were awaiting them; these labourers
-being generally naked except a pair of light drawers
-and a tattered shirt, and shouting, and chattering, and
-laughing to each other, while the white drivers, who
-walked amongst them with great broad-brimmed hats,
-very often interrupted their conversations with a smart
-crack of the whip, and a harsh order to labour on.
-Passing through these busy crowds, and amongst great
-heaps of goods, such as bales and casks just landed from
-England, and masses of shipping stores, over which
-grave merchants and supercargoes were busy with pen
-and ink, comparing invoices, bills of lading, and what
-not, and wrangling about qualities and freights, we<span class="pagenum" id="Page_116">[Pg 116]</span>
-emerged among the houses of the town, which were in
-general mean, and but of one story, built indeed commonly
-of wood, with shingle roofs, which rattled in the
-sea-breeze, and often sheltered by orange trees covered
-at once with fruit and bright flowers, and mangoes with
-their heavy foliage, and tamarinds, with branching feathery
-leaves, and long waving pods. The houses had
-great open casements and covered galleries, called jalousies,
-with pillars, round which many gaudy creeping
-plants clung. Here there were great stores, with all
-manner of commodities, and there, vast taverns, from the
-open windows of which we could hear loud roaring songs
-in French and English, and a great clatter of glasses;
-and now and then, when the noise somewhat lulled, the
-rattle of dice. The streets, which were very narrow,
-dusty, and irregular, were crowded with groups of half-drunken
-seamen and their trulls, gangs of negroes carrying
-great baskets of fruit and vegetables on their
-heads down to the harbour, with planters upon horseback,
-who rode along scattering the crowd right and left,
-and bullock-carts, which creaked and rumbled by, laden
-with kegs of sugar or rum, and drawn by oxen, all
-slavering at the mouth, and seeming half dead with dust
-and heat. Through these crowded and smothering
-streets, Captain Jem, who was our leader, pushed along
-with the air of a man who knew his business and could
-do it. He was often stopped and accosted by his acquaintances,
-many of whom professed themselves surprised
-to see him, as they heard that he had been murdered
-by the Spaniards in Hispaniola.</p>
-
-<p>‘What! Stout Jem, still in the land of the living?’
-said one man, a very tall personage, burnt almost black
-by the sun, wearing great moustaches, and having a
-hanger fixed to a broad leathern belt—‘what! Stout Jem
-again! Why, my lad, we drank a rousing glass to thy
-memory no later than the night before last, at Nance
-Finlayson’s on the quay. We heard that the Spaniards
-had sent thee from Hispaniola to a hotter place still.’</p>
-
-<p>‘No, no, Captain Archemboe,’ quoth our commander;<span class="pagenum" id="Page_117">[Pg 117]</span>
-‘they tried, but having failed, we mean to have our revenge.’</p>
-
-<p>‘What! and you have left the wild bulls and are for
-the sea again? It doth thee honour, man. Hunters are
-but gentlemen butchers after all. The sea, sir—the sea,
-with a tight ship, and tight lads for a crew, and reasonable
-good luck among the galleons—that, sir, is the field,
-and these be the chances for gentlemen! They tell me
-that Davis hath come in from the main after a very good
-cruise, so now I am bound shoreward to see my ancient
-friend, who, I warrant thee, will screw gold out of the
-Spaniards, though he squeeze them till it distil at each
-pore. I give you good day—I give you good day!’</p>
-
-<p>And so, calling to an attendant negro, this formidable
-gentleman passed on. Captain Jem told us that his
-name was Crashaw, and that he had been a valiant buccaneer
-under Mansneldt, but was now retired from the
-sea, and very rich. He cultivated considerable plantations,
-and had shares in many privateers. Our object
-was, however, first to see a person of Captain Jem’s
-acquaintance, who was an old man, a money-lender and
-usurer, and a sort of agent for many of the buccaneers,
-as it was necessary that we should obtain certain stores
-upon credit before setting out upon our voyage, and this
-old man was in use to serve privateers in such matters.
-Accordingly, we presently came to a long, rambling sort
-of house, in which was a great open store, full of goods
-of all kinds, while vast masses of ship furniture and implements,
-such as stones, anchors, boats, and the like, lay
-under sheds around. There were many seafaring people
-viewing the property, and chaffering with the clerks and
-workmen who sold the goods. But Captain Jem passing
-through them into the store, amid the bows and congratulations
-of many there, we followed him through a small
-door and sundry passages into a distant room, within which
-we heard a rustling of paper, and presently, Captain Jem
-pushing open the door, we found ourselves in the company
-of an aged man, with long white hair, a thin face,
-and very bright grey eyes, who was seated at a desk, he<span class="pagenum" id="Page_118">[Pg 118]</span>
-wearing a dirty, greasy doublet, all ink-stains, and loose
-pantouffles, or breeches, much too big for him. Upon
-sight of Captain Jem, he got up hurriedly and shook
-him very cordially by the hand, saying, like the other,
-that he never thought to have seen him again, for that
-the Spaniards were reported to have made but short
-work of all the English and French hunters on the
-northern coast of Hispaniola. Upon this Captain Jem
-told him how we had captured a very fine Spanish vessel,
-and designed to put to sea again directly; but that in
-the meantime he must furnish us with sufficient stores
-and ammunition, and so become a partner in the enterprise.
-The old man at first shook his head.</p>
-
-<p>‘Look ye,’ said he, ‘little is done now-a-days save by
-fleets. My good friend Captain Morgan, a very brave
-man, and wise in those things, ever recommends union.
-The Spaniards’ treasure-ships commonly sail in squadrons,
-and heavily armed; and their towns along the
-coast are very securely guarded, so that there is usually
-hard fighting before these be come at. However,’ quoth
-he, ‘I have great confidence in you, Ezra Hoskins—or
-Stout Jem, as I hear they call you—and provided your
-crew be such as I approve of, why I will stand the risk of
-loss in the venture, being well assured that you and your
-men will do their best for me and for themselves.’</p>
-
-<p>At this, Captain Jem re-assured the old gentleman
-very warmly, and then it was settled that he should
-come aboard the ship that evening, to see what might be
-wanting, and how many guns we could stow. After
-this he ordered refreshments of spirits and tobacco, and
-while we were smoking, he called a young clerk, and
-writing a short letter, gave it him, with instructions that
-he was to carry it at once to the jailor of the town prison,
-who would thereupon bring Alonzo Peres before us.
-The old man, observing that we looked inquiringly at
-each other, told us that a vessel, in which he had no
-mean share, being cruising in the Gulf of Darien, had
-fallen in with and captured a Spanish Barco del Aviso,
-or packet-boat, which had, however, as usual, thrown her<span class="pagenum" id="Page_119">[Pg 119]</span>
-despatches overboard in a sealed leaden case. But the
-captain of this barco proving, when made a prisoner, a
-cowardly fellow who would reveal all he knew of the
-movements of the richly laden ships belonging to his
-countrymen, the English had kept this man a prisoner
-on board, while they dismissed his comrades in a piragua,
-intending to get all the information they could out of
-him.</p>
-
-<p>‘Therefore,’ quoth our old gentleman, who I found was
-called Pratt—‘therefore, we will have him here, and
-examine him. The bark which took him has gone to the
-Pearl Islands on the Mosquito shore, and perhaps he can
-give some information which may guide you on your
-cruise.’</p>
-
-<p>So presently the Spaniard was brought in pinioned,
-and led by two men. He was a very big man, but with
-scowling and mean features; and by his air and complexion,
-he seemed to have been lying weeping in the
-straw of his dungeon. On seeing us, he immediately
-began, in the Spanish language, to pray, in the name of
-all things holy, that we should dismiss him, and let him
-go back to the mainland to his daughter Paquitta, whom
-he loved very dearly, pitiably exclaiming that he was a
-poor man, who had been ruined; still that he wished the
-English no harm, and would pray for them for ever, if
-they would only let him go.</p>
-
-<p>But Pratt cut him short in his lamentings, and proceeded
-to ask, in Spanish, which he spoke very fluently,
-a great number of questions, as to the trade between
-Carthagena and Old Spain, and as to when certain
-richly-laden ships—the names whereof Pratt had at
-hand in a great register—would sail out of that port.
-To all this the Spaniard replied very amply and humbly,
-and said, in particular, that a large ship, in which was
-embarked a considerable quantity of pieces of eight, and
-silver plate to a much greater amount, but he could not
-say exactly how much, would probably be ready for sea,
-and put out in about two mouths’ time. This ship carried,
-he informed us, a private venture, and would not have convoy.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_120">[Pg 120]</span>
-Moreover, she was old, and a very slow sailer, and
-that the merchant who freighted her was the more confident
-that she would escape, inasmuch as it was reported
-and believed in Carthagena, that all the buccaneers were
-upon the point of joining their strength in Jamaica, and
-landing about Porto Bello, with the intention of crossing
-the isthmus, and making a descent upon Panama and
-the shores of the South Sea. This account the traitor
-confirmed with abundance of oaths, calling upon us to
-believe him the more, inasmuch as, quoth he, ‘I have
-now no reason to tell you a lie; I stand in your power,
-and if you hear more certain news, which is likely, and
-it contradict what I have said, why I am in your hands
-to work your will on!’ And with that the pitiful-hearted
-creature began to sob and weep again. Truly, I
-had never seen so small a soul in so big, lusty, and goodly
-a body.</p>
-
-<p>Having made his disclosures, Pratt told the Spaniard
-that he should no more go to prison, but live there in his
-house, and if all turned out to be true as he had stated,
-that he would have his liberty, and, it might be, a reward
-beside. So he being dismissed, we talked the thing over,
-and determined to propose to the crew a cruise on the
-Darien coast, and perhaps to look into the Gulf of
-Venezuela. We then took leave of Mr. Pratt with many
-courtesies, and returned towards the beach. On our way
-hither, we heard a great tumult and clamour, and, turning
-down a narrow lane into the street from whence it proceeded,
-saw, what was to me a new and strange sight.
-In an open space, which partially commanded the
-sea, and backed by a great tavern with verandahs and
-galleries, was assembled a crowd of people, men and
-women, white, brown, and black, drinking, smoking,
-dicing, and swearing. There were tables and huge
-benches scattered about, and sitting on these in every
-attitude, or lying on the ground, not being able either to
-sit or stand, were the people of this strange company. In
-the centre of the carousing place, was a great cask with
-the head knocked out, and from it a half-drunken seaman,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_121">[Pg 121]</span>
-with a face of leering shyness, was drawing forth wine in
-a broken bucket, and pouring it into the glasses, mugs,
-and pipkins, held out to him on all sides. Most of the
-men were white seamen, and they sprawled over the
-tables and benches, with tobacco pipes in their mouths,
-and waved their glasses, and sang loud catches and songs,
-in which the shrill screaming voices of the women rose
-above their hoarse bawling. Most of these women
-seemed of the sort which frequent the streets in Wapping,
-and rob the seamen; others were half-bloods, being
-mulattos; or mustafees—that is to say, three-parts
-Indian; or quadroons—that is to say, three-parts white.
-But they were all dressed in flaunting gauds, and the
-sparkle of jewellery flashed upon their brown skins, as
-they flung their arms about, and rattled dice, or swallowed
-liquor like the men. Every now and then a brawl would
-arise, and knives would straightway glitter in the air,
-and loud thick voices would shout out oaths and exclamations
-in English, and French, and Low Dutch. But
-the general feeling of the revellers being pacific, the
-combatants would be straightway torn asunder, and perhaps
-flung upon the ground, to the danger of their bones;
-after which, the orgies would proceed as before; the men
-would rush in staggering groups up to the cask, or would
-produce their dice again, or greasy packs of cards—a
-species of gambling we learned from the French—and set
-themselves to play, some with great gravity and in silence,
-others shouting and yelling as luck turned for or against
-them, and all of them tossing about handfuls of gold and
-silver, such as dollars and doubloons, as though the
-money had been dirt; until, perhaps, a party would
-break out into a loud roaring song, all curses of the
-Spaniards, which heating them to the highest pitch, they
-would start up, the women with them, hallooing and
-screaming like fiends, and capering and jumping, tossing
-over benches and tables upon the ground, and at last
-drawing forth, and brandishing their hangers, and firing
-their pistols in the air!</p>
-
-<p>In the very midst of this riotous assemblage, a man,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_122">[Pg 122]</span>
-not very sober, but not very drunk, got upon the top of
-an empty cask, he being supported at the legs by the
-same Crashaw we had met, and bawled out in a thundering
-voice that he was going to sell certain commissions
-to cruise against and capture Spanish vessels, and that
-those gentlemen privateers who designed shortly to go to
-sea again, would do well to hearken, and if possible
-purchase, as the commissions would be sold very cheap,
-and their product would be spent in wine, to be drunk
-out at that present sitting by all the honourable company.
-At this announcement there was a general uproar of approbation,
-and Captain Jem, plucking my sleeve, said,
-that hero might be matter which concerned us, and,
-having whispered that the man on the cask was Captain
-Davis, of whom Crashaw had spoken, we made our way
-through the throng, who indeed received us very cordially,
-everywhere holding up full glasses of wine and brandy,
-and pressing us to drink. Meanwhile Davis recognised
-Captain Jem, and, jumping down from the cask, bade him
-welcome. Seats were immediately procured for us, by
-the summary process of flinging their former occupants
-on the ground, and we lit pipes and jingled glasses, like
-the rest; although I do not know a more disgusting
-thing than when a sober man comes into the company of
-many who are drunken, and has yet, in a certain degree,
-to conform to the humour of those about him. From
-Davis, Captain Jem at once procured such a commission
-as he thought we wanted. I did not see what mighty
-good the document could do us; but it seems to have
-been a fancy of our commander’s, and for the paper
-we agreed to pay a couple of doubloons, for which we
-gave an order upon Mr. Pratt, which was immediately
-sent into the tavern, and shortly re-appeared in the
-shape of an additional keg of wine, although that in the
-cask was not yet, by any means, consumed. But when
-the Buccaneers saw the fresh liquor, they flung their
-lighted tobacco-pipes into the old cask, and then, with
-drunken glee, drew forth great mugs and glassfuls, with
-which they besprinkled each other, and at last upset the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_123">[Pg 123]</span>
-cask, treading, trampling, and dancing in the spilt wine,
-until they had churned it into red mud.</p>
-
-<p>You may be sure that we were anxious enough to get
-away from these mad revellers, who, after the foolish
-fashion of too many sailors, both abroad and at
-home, were spending, in a few hours or days of insane
-debauchery, the money which they had risked their lives
-for months to obtain. At first, they were not willing to
-let us go, insisting that since we had paid for the additional
-keg of wine, we should bide the drinking of it
-out; but upon our telling them that we were busily
-engaged in fitting out a privateer, and that the Blue
-Peter would speedily be hoisted at the fore, they consented
-to let us depart—first drinking success to our
-cruise in great bumpers, with cheering and firing of
-pistols, and almost every man shouting out some advice,
-as to whither we ought to proceed. Here was one
-bawling out in favour of the Mosquito Coast; and there
-another screaming that most booty would be found to the
-eastward of the Gulf of Venezuela. At length, we got
-free, and devoted ourselves for some days to preparing
-the schooner, internally, for the accommodation of a
-larger crew than she had ever before carried.</p>
-
-<p>There was no lack of hands, for Captain Jem was
-known as a commander, and as soon as we hoisted the
-Blue Peter, seamen came off in great numbers and applied
-to ship with us. Captain Jem personally examined all
-claimants, and when they passed his scrutiny successfully,
-it was for those who already formed the crew to receive
-or reject them. In this way, in a couple of days we were
-well manned by thirty-six stout seamen, including our
-original party. Except two Frenchmen and one Dutchman,
-all the new part of the crew was English. Our
-boatswain was a short, square-shouldered, powerful man,
-who had once commanded a ship, and was a good West-Indian
-pilot. His name was John Clink. We had also
-a good carpenter, and what was of almost as great
-importance, a surgeon, esteemed very skilful, a young
-Scotsman, like myself, bred in the University of Glasgow,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_124">[Pg 124]</span>
-and very eager in prosecuting researches into the natural
-history and productions of the teeming islands and continents
-of the West. The surgeon’s name was Wood.
-Meantime, Old Pratt had come on board, and after
-inspecting the schooner, presently sent four guns, with a
-great quantity of ammunition, and near sixty stand of
-musketry, with boarding-pikes, cutlasses, and hangers in
-proportion. We also carried a great boat which took up
-almost all the space between the masts, and we slightly
-altered the rigging of the schooner, setting up square foretopsails
-and foresails, so as to make her handier going before
-the wind. Our victualling being now completed, and
-all things ready for sea, we had, as is usual among Buccaneers,
-a general meeting of the crew to determine and sign
-articles. A paper of indenture was drawn up by Mr.
-Pratt, and to it we all affixed our names, or our marks.
-First, the indenture stipulated that the terms upon which
-the voyage was to be undertaken, were ‘no prey, no pay.’
-Then it was provided, that all the booty obtained, of
-whatsoever nature, should be flung into one general stock,
-nobody whatsoever keeping anything back for himself,
-but acting fairly and honourably to his comrades; out of
-this common fund all were to be paid in due proportion,
-considering their station on board, or their share in the
-venture. First came the proprietors of the ship, who
-were three—being Le Picard, Nicky, and myself, for they
-did not count the Indian. A certain proportion was
-awarded to us, in the capacity which I have mentioned,
-and another proportion to Mr. Pratt, calculated by the
-value of the sea-stock, &amp;c., wherewith he had supplied us.
-Then the salaries of the captain, the quartermaster, the
-boatswain, the carpenter, and the surgeon were fixed,
-and certain sums were determined upon, to be given in
-compensation for the different species of wounds which
-we might receive. These compensations were upon the
-following scale, and they applied alike to all the ship’s
-company. The loss of a right arm, six hundred pieces of
-eight, or six slaves; of a left arm, five hundred pieces, or
-five slaves; for a right leg the same; for a left leg, four<span class="pagenum" id="Page_125">[Pg 125]</span>
-hundred pieces of eight, or four slaves; for an eye one
-hundred pieces of eight, or one slave; and for a finger the
-like sum. As for the proportion of pay, the captain had
-as much as five ordinary seamen, and the quartermaster,
-or master’s mate, which was my station, that of two.
-The rest of the crew shared equally, and two boys whom
-we had on board drew the pay of one able-bodied man.
-Furthermore, it was stipulated, that each mariner, without
-any distinction of rank, should be daily entitled to two
-full meals of the ship’s stores, besides what game or fresh
-meat we might fall in with, and the indenture concluded
-by reciting that all those who signed it by name or mark,
-did thereby take a solemn oath, not to hide or conceal
-from their comrades the slightest article of value which
-they might become possessed of, but to fling all, without
-let or drawback, into the common fund. This document
-was committed to the care of Mr. Pratt, and a copy made
-by one of his clerks, which was deposited in the main
-cabin, and of free access to all. It was then proclaimed
-that next morning, on the setting in of the sea-breeze,
-which, on the southern side of the island, is favourable
-for leaving the coast, we would weigh anchor and stand
-off upon our voyage—so all was bustle and hurry—the
-schooner being surrounded by fleets of canoes, selling
-vegetables, fruit, and such wares, to be added to the sea
-stock of all who were minded to purchase them.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="r10">
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XII">CHAPTER XII.<br><br>
-<span class="fs80">OF THE DEATH OF AN OLD FRIEND.</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p>About sunset, Captain Jem came up to me, and inquired
-whether I had any final business to settle ashore, in which
-case he could spare me a couple of hours, but no more.
-I replied, that I had no reason for quitting the vessel,
-when all at once, the thought of my preserver on board
-the French felucca, Wright, flashed upon me. I remembered
-how he had told me, that he lived in Jamaica, at
-Port Royal in all probability, and I reproached myself<span class="pagenum" id="Page_126">[Pg 126]</span>
-for not having before thought of inquiring after him. So
-I proceeded on shore at once, and went straight to Mr.
-Pratt’s, who I imagined would be likely to give me the
-information of which I stood in need. Nor was I disappointed.
-Mr. Pratt, indeed, knew no person of the
-name of Wright, but he had frequently seen the man to
-whom my description must apply, and whose real name
-was Blagrove. ‘He lives,’ said Mr. Pratt, ‘in great retirement,
-dwelling in a small hut on the outskirts of the
-town, and cultivating, with two or three negroes, such a
-small plantation, as suffices to supply him with the necessaries
-of life.’</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Pratt then, at my request, called a negro lad, and
-ordered him to be my guide to Blagrove’s dwelling;
-adding, however, that the old Cromwellian lived in such
-solitude, and hated the faces of strangers so cordially, that
-he doubted whether I should be admitted. Determined,
-however, to make the experiment, I set off, the negro
-preceding me with a lantern. After clearing the town we
-had a rough and rugged walk, through trees and plantations,
-and deep Guinea grass, already drenched with dew.
-Fire-flies sparkled in every bush, and the hum of innumerable
-insects, and the harsh croaking of frogs in the
-swamps and ditches, made a melancholy music. At length
-we descried a distant light gleaming amid trees; at the
-sight of it, the negro stopped, and pointing, said, ‘Dat
-Massa Blagrove’s house!’ at the same time making as
-though he would return.</p>
-
-<p>‘Well,’ said I, ‘do you not intend to come on and light
-me to the door?’</p>
-
-<p>The negro suddenly fell upon his knees. ‘Oh, Massa,
-please not insist; let Juba go back, now. Massa Blagrove
-terrible man, Obeah man, no like oder white buccra;
-live all alone by himself, wid Fetish. Oh, most great
-heaps of Fetish.’</p>
-
-<p>Now, at this time I did not understand the negro at
-all. I knew not what he meant by Obeah or Fetish, but
-I afterwards found that the gloomy life and austere
-manners of the old Republican, had caused the negroes<span class="pagenum" id="Page_127">[Pg 127]</span>
-to believe that he was a sorcerer, or being of supernatural
-powers, and that they dreaded above all things being
-obliged to enter his grounds after dark. Seeing Mr.
-Pratt’s negro, however, in a state of visible terror, at the
-idea of proceeding further, but having no time to stay to
-investigate the cause, I took the lantern from his hand,
-and told him to remain where he was until I came back.
-This he promised to do, but I had hardly advanced two
-paces, when I heard him scampering away through the
-rustling grass as fast as his legs could carry him. I
-called after the fugitive, but he gave no reply, so after
-muttering a curse upon his cowardice, I consoled myself by
-the reflection that he would be likely to get a sound
-flogging from Mr. Pratt for returning without the lantern,
-and then slowly advanced towards the light, which yet
-glimmered through the trees. I was not long in ascertaining
-that it shone from the rude window of a wattled
-hut, over which the branches of a great tree waved and
-rustled in the land wind. Having found the door, I
-knocked repeatedly, but received no reply, and as I stood
-listening, I thought I heard the sound of smothered
-moans. Thereupon I lifted the latch—the door was not
-otherwise secured—and entered. The cottage consisted
-of but one room, very rudely furnished. Hoes and
-spades, and such like implements, lay in the corners.
-There was a massive oaken table in the centre of the
-room, and at one end of it stood the candle, whose light I
-had seen from without. Hanging from the roof, close to
-the table, was a sort of rude curtain of canvas, which
-screened off a portion of the chamber, and from behind
-this curtain I heard the moaning come again: after hesitating
-for a moment I stepped forward and removed the
-drapery. Upon a low bed, without any curtains, his head
-and chest supported by a bag, such as that in which seamen
-keep their clothes, lay Wright, or Blagrove—now,
-alas, a dying man. He was terribly wasted, as though by
-fever or ague; his grey eyes so sunken that they seemed
-to gleam from the bottom of dark holes, and his features
-were shrunk and distorted, for the fingers of Death were<span class="pagenum" id="Page_128">[Pg 128]</span>
-pressing them. The sick man took no notice of me, so
-that I could mark a large Bible in which he seemed to
-have been reading, and which had fallen from his pithless
-hand upon the bed.</p>
-
-<p>‘Mr. Wright,’ I said. He replied not a word.</p>
-
-<p>‘John Blagrove,’ I repeated.</p>
-
-<p>He started, and said feebly, ‘I am he—who calls?’</p>
-
-<p>‘Leonard Lindsay,’ I replied, ‘the Scots mariner, whom
-you aided to escape from the ship of Montbars.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Lindsay—Lindsay!’ he muttered, ‘I know not that
-name.’ He paused, and then said loudly and clearly,
-‘Death—my voice is for death. He hath most foully
-betrayed his great trust, and the blood of the saints
-crieth against him. By what law, sayest thou, shall we
-put him to death? Even by that which gave Jericho and
-its people to the sword of Joshua, the son of Nun.’</p>
-
-<p>Listening to this, I saw that the mind of the dying man
-was running upon the great action of his life, and forbore
-to disturb him. But presently the delirium fit seemed
-to pass away, and he stirred restlessly, and muttered that
-he was athirst. I looked round the cottage, and finding
-a pitcher of water and a mug, held the latter to his lips;
-when he had drunk he seemed revived, shut his eyes for a
-moment, and then, opening them, fixed his gaze upon me,
-and smiled faintly.</p>
-
-<p>‘I know you now,’ he said; ‘how came you here?’</p>
-
-<p>Feeling that his time was but short, I hurriedly replied,
-that having arrived at Jamaica from Hispaniola, I had
-heard that he resided here, and had lost no time in coming
-to see, and thank him.</p>
-
-<p>‘You will see the last of me, then,’ he murmured; ‘I
-told you I should rest in the wilderness, and I am fast
-going to that long home.’</p>
-
-<p>I asked him if he had not had proper medicines and
-help in his fever.</p>
-
-<p>‘No,’ he replied, ‘none; I did not wish to live. I left
-myself in the hands of God. He has called my soul, and
-I obey the summons as firmly as I can.’</p>
-
-<p>‘But surely,’ quoth I, ‘you require help—attendance?’</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_129">[Pg 129]</span></p>
-
-<p>‘None,’ says he—‘a man can die alone. When I felt
-the delirium coming on, yesterday, and knew that my hour
-was at hand, I called together my four slaves and gave
-them their liberty. They went singing and shouting
-away, and I remained here waiting for the last moment
-with contrition, and prayer, and praise.’</p>
-
-<p>After this he was silent for a long time. Then he said,
-‘Once I was a judge at a great trial, now I go to be judged
-for my judgment. Then, I did that which I believed to
-be right and good. I am of the same mind still. Before
-an hour, I shall know whether my voice spoke justly
-or no.’</p>
-
-<p>A very dismal silence succeeded. Blagrove was sinking
-very fast. When I took his hand it was cold and wet,
-and his breath began to come in flutterings and gaspings.
-While I watched him, the light, which burned in a rude
-iron candlestick, suddenly flickered and went out; and,
-except for the glimmer of my lantern, we were in darkness.
-Indeed, it was very terrible. The great branches
-of the tree overhead groaned as they swayed with the
-night wind, and sometimes hit the roof with a loud rattle;
-the dismal croak of the frog sounded incessantly; and
-the goat-sucker whooped his loud hollow note from the
-forest. As I watched the dying, I suddenly heard the
-lattice of the window shake, and, turning round with a
-start, saw a hideous black face, crowned with a curly
-mass of grey hair, laid close against the coarse thick glass.
-My heart beat, and my blood curdled as I gazed. In a
-moment, however, the face was withdrawn, and I was
-vainly attempting to persuade myself that the vision I had
-seen was fancy, when, by the uncertain light of the lantern,
-I observed the latch of the door move. The cold sweat
-came out upon me again as the door opened, and a
-hideous apparition entered. It was that of a very aged
-negro woman. Her face had that peculiar blackness
-which marks those negroes actually born on the Guinea
-coast; and it was, so to speak, a perfect mass of huge
-wrinkles and skinny folds, through which her white
-teeth appeared with a ghastly conspicuousness. The<span class="pagenum" id="Page_130">[Pg 130]</span>
-principal part of her dress was an old dingy blanket;
-and round her neck was hung a cord, upon which shreds
-of cloth, birds’ feathers, pellets of clay and stones with
-holes in them—the shells of eggs, and fragments of
-broken bottles were strung. This uncouth being advanced
-slowly into the hut, holding up in both hands a
-sort of graven image, or idol, made of a block of wood
-roughly carved, and stuck over with such scraps of
-offal and filth as composed her own rude necklace. I was
-so absorbed in a sort of compassionate horror, that I had
-no power to prevent her approach, but rather shrank
-from her—the hag looked so fearful and witch-like. So
-she proceeded to the very side of the bed—Blagrove,
-meanwhile, having his eyes shut and his hands clasped,
-as though in secret prayer—and then suddenly dropping
-on her knees, she raised her hideous idol before the face
-of the dying, and said, in a harsh grating voice:</p>
-
-<p>‘Buccra dying—buccra pray to Obi.’</p>
-
-<p>Coming to myself at these words, I dashed forwards,
-wrenched the idol from the hands of the idolatress, and
-flung the hag back towards the door. She turned upon
-me with the fury of a wild cat.</p>
-
-<p>‘What for you here?’ she said; ‘he is Obeah man, me
-is Obeah woman. Obeah men and women pray to Obi.
-It is one great Fetish.’</p>
-
-<p>For reply I walked to the door, and, opening it, flung
-the idol forth into the night. When I turned again, the
-hag was affixing a bunch of parrot feathers to the bed.</p>
-
-<p>‘I set Obi for him,’ she cried; ‘I set Obi for you. De
-Fetish hab kill him—de Fetish will kill you.’</p>
-
-<p>Blagrove at this started up in bed—‘I am getting
-blind,’ he said, faintly; ‘what voice is that?’</p>
-
-<p>‘De voice of Mammy Koromantee—of de Obeah
-woman,’ said the hag; ‘de moder of Paul, your negro,
-dat you set free. Paul say you die; I bring Obi for you
-to pray to—Obi great.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Lindsay, Leonard Lindsay,’ gasped Blagrove, ‘come
-close to me—quick!—I am choking. Keep her away,
-fling down the strange god—fling Dagon from the high
-places.’</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_131">[Pg 131]</span></p>
-
-<p>I now supported his head, and saw that the great
-change was at hand.</p>
-
-<p>‘Mary, Mary,’ he said faintly; ‘I come, Mary, my
-wife.’</p>
-
-<p>There passed a spasm over his face, and then his head
-hung heavy and dead across my arm. Immediately, the
-negress raised her voice, tremulous with age, and began
-to chant a sort of song—perhaps it was a dirge, in her
-own tongue.</p>
-
-<p>‘Go,’ said I, interrupting her lament—‘go to Mr.
-Pratt’s, and tell them that Blagrove is dead; they will
-return with you, and I will give you money.’</p>
-
-<p>‘You gib me money,’ said the negress, quickly; ‘oh,
-den I go to Massa Pratt’s, and I find Obi when de
-daylight come.’</p>
-
-<p>With this the hag bustled out as speedily as her old
-limbs would bear her, and in less than an hour Mr. Pratt
-and some of his people arrived. I paid the old woman
-her guerdon, and was glad to be relieved from my
-melancholy post—Mr. Pratt assuring me that all needful
-attention would be bestowed upon the dead. As for the
-woman, he said that she was more than half crazed with
-age and infirmity; but that in coming to the hut he
-believed that, after her own fashion, she had meant
-kindly. She was reputed by the negroes to be an Obeah
-woman, or witch, and the scraps of feathers, rags and
-egg-shells wherewith she had adorned herself were the
-means by which she wrought her spells and incantations.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="r10">
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XIII">CHAPTER XIII.<br><br>
-<span class="fs80">THE BUCCANEERS SAIL FOR THE SPANISH MAIN, AND ARE CHASED<br>
-BY A GREAT SHIP OF WAR.</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p>In an hour after these events, I was on board the
-‘Will o’ the Wisp,’ greatly to the relief of Captain Jem,
-who feared, from my long stay, that some evil had befallen
-me; and with the first puff of sea-breeze in the morning,
-we were gliding past the point of the Pallisades out into the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_132">[Pg 132]</span>
-open ocean, on my first buccaneering voyage. As the sun
-rose into a cloudless sky, the merry trade-wind freshened
-until it tore up the tops of the long swells into ridges of
-rolling foam, and caused the schooner to careen gaily
-over, so that the water buzzed, and gushed, and gurgled
-in the lee-scupper holes. Then my spirits, which all
-night long had been heavy and depressed, rose with every
-mile of sea which rolled between us and the land, and I
-felt as elated and merry, bound upon a wild and venturesome
-expedition to an unhealthy and little known
-coast, as when the ‘Golden Grove’ raised her anchor
-from the sands of Leith, and I expected in due time to
-see the hills of Italy and Greece.</p>
-
-<p>We had a fierce and wild-looking crew, wearing in
-their dress the fashions of many lands; some were clad
-in jackets cut out of rich brocades and stuffs captured
-from the Spaniards. Others had doublets of hide. All
-wore moustachioes and beards, and carried great broad-bladed
-knives stuck into girdles of leather, or neatly
-twisted yarn. The experience of a few days showed us
-that we were manned by active and skilful seamen, one
-or two who turned out inferior in this respect being set
-to duties fitted for them, such as cooking, serving out
-the provisions from the casks, and helping the carpenter
-or sail-maker. Moreover, the men seemed tractable as
-well as handy fellows, and were on very good terms with
-each other, and quite delighted with the captain and the
-ship. To this there was but one exception—a sailor
-from London, called Bell. This man was sullen, sulky,
-and lazy, and Captain Jem having found him skulking
-from work, upon one occasion, when the wind blew very
-fresh, and the whole crew were on deck taking in sail,
-gave him so strong a hint with the flat of his cutlass,
-that for some time, at least, there was no repetition of
-the offence.</p>
-
-<p>On the third day, after losing sight of Jamaica, soon
-after sunrise, we descried a great sail to windward. The
-weather was then almost calm, and the swell trifling.
-Still the appearance of the sky was, as we thought,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_133">[Pg 133]</span>
-threatening. The sun had risen of a fiery red, and huge
-fleecy banks of vapour brooded over the ocean. The
-sail must have been for some time in sight ere we had
-distinguished it from the wreaths of white morning mist
-which here and there floated over the water; but having
-made it out, we knew that so great a spread of canvas
-must arise from a stately ship. Now, if she were an
-Englishman, a Frenchman, or a Dutchman, we had nothing
-to say to her, whereas if she were a Spaniard, she must
-be either an exceeding rich merchantman, in which case
-it was our business to speak her as fast as possible, or
-she was a man-of war, in which case, we could hardly
-pack too much canvas upon the schooner to get her out
-of such a dangerous neighbourhood. However, the ship
-had the weather-guage of us; she would bring down the
-sea-breeze with her, and all we could do was to lie idly
-upon the swell, watching her motions. For myself, I
-climbed to the schooner’s main-topmast, with the best
-perspective glass we had on board; and I had not been
-long there before I could plainly perceive that our big
-neighbour had felt the power of the sea-breeze, for she
-rose fast, spreading her great sheets of canvas out, like
-wings, and coming directly down upon us.</p>
-
-<p>Captain Jem then hailed me eagerly from the deck,
-asking whether she looked like a merchant ship or a
-frigate. At first, I could give little satisfaction to his
-questions, as the stranger was coming directly towards
-us; but presently, whether from bad steering or not
-I am unaware, she gave a sheer to starboard, and lifting
-that moment upon a swell, I saw that she carried a great
-broadside of heavy guns, with a very high poop, rising I
-am sure forty feet above the water, and all encrusted, as
-it were, with galleries and carved windows, after the
-fashion in which the Spaniards build their men-of-war.
-Upon this intelligence, we prepared for immediate flight.
-We were to leeward, and so had nothing for it but to
-run before the wind. As yet, however, only those little
-puffs or airs called by sailors cat’s-paws, the precursors of
-the coming wind, were stealing over the great shiny<span class="pagenum" id="Page_134">[Pg 134]</span>
-backs of the smooth lazy swells, whereas the Spanish
-frigate, for such we doubted her not to be, was in the
-midst of roughened water, and rolling two great ridges of
-white foam, from beneath her bows. How we cursed the
-chance which condemned us to lie idle on the ocean,
-when a formidable enemy was swooping down upon us,
-with a wind which made his heaviest canvas surge, and
-his stout masts bend and creak. Meantime, however,
-we prepared to set studding-sails, and indeed hoisted
-them to be ready for the first of the coming breeze, at
-the same time, by the help of a sweep or great oar
-swinging round the head of the schooner in the direction
-which circumstances compelled us to take. This manœuvre
-was instantly observed on board the great ship, for she
-straightway fired a cannon, and hauled up the gorgeous
-ensign of Spain to her main-topmast head, where it
-streamed forth in all its red and yellow glory. The next
-moment a bright spout of flame flashed from the Spaniard’s
-bows, and the ball came skipping along the sea, making
-its last plunge not a quarter of a mile from us. But
-almost at the same moment our sails flapped and surged,
-then steadily swelling out, the schooner began to slip
-through the water. Seeing this, the Spaniards fired again
-and again; but without effect. Meantime, we were hard
-at work, setting every stitch of canvas we could get to
-draw, and presently we had quite enough of wind for the
-safety of our spars, the breeze driving before it that
-heavy pelting shower, which often falls soon after sunrise,
-and which sailors call the Pride of the Morning. The
-‘Will-o’-the-Wisp’ was now careering along at her full
-speed, rolling heavily before the great following surges,
-which would often rise in white foam, hissing and glancing
-round her stern, and then melting, as it were, from
-beneath her, would sweep on, while the schooner plunged
-heavily down into the trough, her sails flapping like
-thunder in the lull, and then tearing and struggling, as
-though they would drag the masts out of the keel as the
-vessel was hove high again on the crest of the next
-following wave. Still the large ship was gaining upon us<span class="pagenum" id="Page_135">[Pg 135]</span>
-fast. A schooner is a species of vessel unfitted to scud
-before a brisk gale, like a square rigged ship, although in
-beating up to windward, we would most likely have the
-advantage. However, we spread every inch of canvas we
-could stretch out, and Captain Jem and myself both
-stood by the tiller. In an hour from the commencement
-of the chase, the Spaniard was not a mile astern of us;
-and truly, if the great ship had been a friend, she would
-have been a gay and a gallant sight—with her brave tall
-masts, and great sheets of canvas, which rolled from side
-to side, like a tower which totters in an earthquake, and
-her vast bows, all carved and encrusted with ornaments
-and devices, which would now plunge deeply into the
-brine, and then rise with the sea water pouring and
-flashing down, amid the sculptures and images of saints
-and long moulded and fretted ledges and serpentine
-projections of carved wood, which extended in gracious
-undulations on either side of the cut-water. But we had
-little mind to admire the cunning work of the Spanish
-artificers, although, unhappily, every moment we saw it
-plainer and plainer. Our men began to look pale and
-troubled, and spoke in whispers to each other, and some
-of them lay sullenly down upon the deck. Meanwhile,
-Captain Jem and I consulted together in a low voice,
-and presently hit upon a plan which would give us, at all
-events, a last chance.</p>
-
-<p>‘Nicky Hamstring,’ said Captain Jem, ‘show the Don
-a sight of the flag which Sir Francis Drake carried against
-the great Armada.’</p>
-
-<p>At this bold speech, the men seemed to pluck up a little.</p>
-
-<p>‘What, boys!’ quoth brave Jem; ‘you do not mean to
-stretch out your throats to the Spaniard’s whittles?’</p>
-
-<p>‘Where is the use of preaching?’ cries one of the men.
-‘If we don’t strike and heave-to, he will give us the stem,
-run his ship crash over us, and send us to the bottom
-before we can say a prayer.’</p>
-
-<p>Captain Jem pulled out a great pistol and cocked it.</p>
-
-<p>‘That was George Bell’s voice!’ he shouted. ‘Hark
-ye, you snivelling cur, say but another syllable of striking<span class="pagenum" id="Page_136">[Pg 136]</span>
-or heaving-to, and I’ll send you to hell with the word
-upon your lips. Comrades,’ continued the captain,
-raising his voice, ‘is it fit that brave men and staunch
-should listen to a hen-hearted skulk like the man who
-spoke?’</p>
-
-<p>‘No, no!’ cried the whole of the crew, ‘no striking;
-let the Dons do their worst.’ And at that moment the
-ensign of St. George fluttering up to the main-topmast
-head, we greeted it with a cheer, the echo of which came
-back from the broad sails of the Spaniard.</p>
-
-<p>‘Now, men,’ said Captain Jem, ‘be steady and sharp,
-and in ten minutes we shall have the big ship’s weather-guage.’</p>
-
-<p>Several moments passed in perfect silence, broken only
-by the roar of the sea around us, and the great plunges
-of the Spanish ship, as she came careering and wallowing
-over the waves. We looked back, and saw her bows
-clustered with men, and standing upon the bowsprit,
-with his arm round a stay, we could discern the figure of
-an officer, with a very brave uniform, and holding a
-trumpet in his hand. Presently this officer passed his
-trumpet to a man who stood by him, and who at once
-hailed in good English. We all heard his words, for they
-echoed loudly between the sails of the two ships.</p>
-
-<p>‘Surrender,’ he said, ‘or we will run the frigate over
-you.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Stand by your sheets, men,’ said Captain Jem, softly;
-‘and never fear for all I do, that we are going to run our
-necks into Spanish hemp this cruise.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Do you surrender?’ hailed the Spaniard once more.</p>
-
-<p>There was now not a hundred feet between the man-of-war’s
-jib and our taffrail rail. It was fearful to see
-the great ship, like a moving steeple, rushing down upon
-us, and, despite of myself, I felt my teeth grinding
-against each other. I looked back once more, there was
-the mighty prow, clustered with men, frowning above us,
-and ploughing the sea into a great furrow of foam.
-That ship could crush our schooner as a rock would
-smash a pipkin.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_137">[Pg 137]</span></p>
-
-<p>Yet no muscle quivered in Captain Jem’s face. All at
-once he sung out, sharp and quick—</p>
-
-<p>‘Nicky, strike the flag.’</p>
-
-<p>The Spanish man-of-war rose upon a great sea, heaving
-her bows out of the water almost to her keel. The
-next moment she would be crushing down bodily upon
-our deck. Just then the red-cross ensign disappeared
-from the mast-head, and Captain Jem, turning round,
-took off his hat. The officer on the bowsprit of the
-great ship immediately shouted, and as he spoke the vast
-bows gave a sudden sweep to the port or larboard side,
-almost shaving our taffrail as they grazed past.</p>
-
-<p>‘Now, then!’ roared Captain Jem, ramming down the
-tiller hard a port. ‘Sheets, boys, mind your sheets—in
-with them—in with the larboard sheets. Hurrah, boys,
-hurrah! show the Don that he must shut his claws quick,
-or we will slip through his fingers.’</p>
-
-<p>The words had not been spoken when the Will-o’-the-Wisp
-flew round like a top, in the opposite direction to
-that of the Spaniard, plunging down into one tremendous
-sea, taking tons upon tons of the glancing green water
-over her weather bow, and then lying over to the wind,
-until the washing seas rose up to the very centre of her
-deck. Of course the studding-sail-booms snapped like
-pipe-stems, and the sails they supported burst away and
-floated down to leeward. But for this we cared very
-little.</p>
-
-<p>‘If the spars stand it we’re safe,’ shouted the Captain
-to me.</p>
-
-<p>I looked aloft, the schooner was almost on her broadside,
-the sea pouring over and over us in great curling
-volumes of blinding spray, flashing up high into the
-rigging, and drenching the surging, tearing canvas.
-This lasted but for a moment. There was a lull, the
-schooner righted in the water, plunged heavily at one or
-two seas, and then, although carrying a fearful press of
-sail, shot gaily away to windward. We looked astern.
-The Spaniard had been utterly discomfited by our
-manœuvre. After diverging from her course just enough,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_138">[Pg 138]</span>
-as she thought, to save us from being run down, she had
-been obliged to keep before the wind, being afraid, with
-all her sail, to try the desperate experiment of luffing up,
-and was now a good mile to leeward, her crew busily employed
-in getting in all her light canvas, evidently with
-the intent of following up the chase.</p>
-
-<p>‘Now, boys!’ called out the captain—‘we have not
-shaken off the Don yet. He has had a taste of our quality,
-but he will be after us again. So while he is amusing
-himself to leeward yonder, let us get in a reef or so, the
-schooner will make better way through the water than
-when she is dragged down by too great a show of canvas.’</p>
-
-<p>So presently the Will-o’-the-Wisp’ was under suitable
-sail, working hard to windward. Captain Jem was right
-in saying that the Spaniard meant not to give up his prey
-after one baffled swoop, and in a brief space he was close
-hauled upon the same tack with ourselves, careening down
-to the wind, until we sometimes expected to see him turn
-over bodily. It was lucky for us, that, heeling over so
-much, he could not bring his guns to bear upon the
-schooner. Once or twice he fired a cannon, but the ball
-must have passed far above us. Our own pieces were too
-small for us to return the compliment, across a mile of sea,
-with any chance of hard hitting; besides, it was our cue
-to trust rather to our legs than our teeth, and to mind
-our canvas rather than our guns.</p>
-
-<p>All that long and anxious day did the Spaniard stick
-to our skirts. Had the breeze been lighter, we would
-have left him hand over hand, but the strong wind, and
-great tumbling seas, often bore us bodily to leeward, while
-the Spaniard burst through and through them with mighty
-plunges. Such a wind and sea, I repeat, could not but
-be of great advantage to the bigger and heavier ship.
-Thus it came to pass that when the sun touched the
-western waves, the Spaniard still held his position about
-a mile to leeward of the schooner. We had run more
-than one hundred miles since we hauled our wind,
-and still for all we could see, we had neither lost nor
-gained an inch.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_139">[Pg 139]</span></p>
-
-<p>The night came on, but the wind still howled unabatedly
-over the far-spreading ridges of angry water.
-There was no moon, and great patches of dusky clouds
-went scudding by between the ocean and the stars.</p>
-
-<p>‘Now, my mates,’ quoth Captain Jem—‘we shall find
-out whether Jack Spaniard’s eyes mark well in the dark.
-Let all lights be extinguished in the ship, except the
-binnacle lantern.’</p>
-
-<p>This order was speedily obeyed, and soon afterwards
-the binnacle lamp was carefully screened, and at the same
-instant we lit a bright lantern, and placed it conspicuously
-on our lee quarter. By this manœuvre it is evident
-that the Spaniard, if he saw aught, saw but one light, as
-though we carried no more. After this we tacked several
-times, shifting the lantern so as to allow our pursuer a
-good view of it, and make him believe that we were showing
-the light in bravado. By this time it was nine
-o’clock and the wind was sensibly abating. We could
-see naught of the Spaniard, although many a pair of eyes
-were strained until they ached and throbbed with vain
-efforts to make out the secret of his whereabouts. About
-ten o’clock, we were upon the starboard tack, the schooner
-then laying a course which would have brought her back
-to Jamaica. A good-sized cask was then prepared, by
-eight twelve-pound balls being cast into it as it stood on
-one end on deck. Then a sort of pole or spar, made out
-of an oar, was fitted into the cask, being stepped as it
-were amongst the cannon balls, and coming up through
-the opposite head of the cask, like a mast through the
-deck of a ship. This apparatus being well secured by stout
-ropes, was hove overboard, and slackening the lines, we
-saw that it floated perfectly upright. The machine was
-then hauled in again; the lantern which I have already
-mentioned, was made fast to the top of the pole, and then
-the cask and all were carefully lifted over the bulwark,
-and cast adrift upon the sea; while, at the same moment,
-the tiller was put down, the schooner tilted gaily round
-and filled upon the other tack, and in five minutes we were
-half a mile away from the decoy beacon, which glimmered<span class="pagenum" id="Page_140">[Pg 140]</span>
-with an uncertain light, as it rose rocking upon the ridges
-of the seas. In silence and in darkness we kept our new
-course. Happily this was the gloomiest period of the
-night. Lowering banks of cloud lay heavily upon the
-eastern horizon, and the stars only glimmered occasionally
-through the scud. The schooner was kept a little from
-the wind, so as to make her sail her very best, and went
-careering, as though she bore a light heart, across the
-waves. We saw or heard nothing of our enemy, and
-by midnight we trusted that many a league of ocean
-rolled between our gay schooner and the great Spanish
-man-of-war.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="r10">
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XIV">CHAPTER XIV.<br><br>
-<span class="fs80">THE STRANGE ADVENTURE OF THE UNKNOWN SHOALS<br>
-AND THE DWARF PILOT.</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p>That evening it chanced that I had the mid-watch, and
-so when the dead of the night came, I took charge of the
-deck, and Captain Jem, and all who were not upon duty
-went below. The weather was moderate, with a steady
-breeze broad upon our larboard beam, as we steered
-almost due south. I walked the deck for nearly three
-hours without having occasion to give an order to one of
-the watch. I was weary and exhausted, for the excitement
-of the chase had now gone off, and as for the seamen
-around me, they were stretched out dozing here and there
-upon the deck, and as we had a clear sea, and the wind
-held very steady, I was loth to rouse the poor fellows up.
-There was an old grey-headed sailor, whom we called
-Bristol Tom, at the helm, and I sometimes listened to him
-as he crooned over ancient sea ballads, which had been
-sung by the sailors of Sir Francis Drake, and sometimes
-conversed with him upon the clever style in which we had
-shaken off the Spaniard. So the night waned slowly
-away. Every ten minutes or so I would go forward and
-cast a long look over the dull sea, stretching away before
-us like a heaving sheet of lead, save where here and there<span class="pagenum" id="Page_141">[Pg 141]</span>
-it was broken by a dullish white streak, where a wave
-rose higher than common, curled, and broke. At length,
-it wanted but half an hour to the time of my relief, and I
-sat down upon the weather bulwark with my arm round
-the stay, and began, according to my frequent custom, to
-build very gorgeous castles in the air. I thought of the
-happy day when, having made prize-money sufficient in
-these far-off seas, I would return to Scotland and hear
-again the music which of all others was sweetest to the
-ear of my memory—the voices of my kindred, and the
-whimpling and gurgling of the Balwearie burn, as it
-trickled down the broomy knowes into the clear pools,
-where, with a running noose made of horsehair, attached
-to the end of a switch, I used to mark and catch the
-speckled pars. During my meditations, it struck me
-once or twice that the motion of the sea was changing;
-that the flow of the waves was not so uniform, and that
-they jerked the schooner sharply as though she were
-ploughing a cross sea. Thinking, however, that Bristol
-Tom might be nodding over the tiller, I called to him to
-look sharp and steer fine, to which he promptly replied,
-‘Ay, ay, sir!’ and my spirit fled away again to the bonny
-shores of Fife. All at once, a low, dull roaring sound, very
-different from the sharp plunges of the schooner, and the
-seething, hissing noise of the seas, as they burst in beds
-of foam from beneath her bows, came floating on the night
-wind.</p>
-
-<p>‘Bristol Tom!’ I cried, sharply, ‘did you hear nothing
-like the roar of surf?’</p>
-
-<p>‘Lord love ye, sir,’ quoth the steersman, ‘there be no
-surf but where there be land near the top of the sea,
-and hereabouts five hundred fathom of line would reach
-no bottom.’</p>
-
-<p>‘It must have been the wind eddying in the sail above
-me,’ I thought, but I kept my ears cocked pretty sharply.</p>
-
-<p>Presently, I heard the sound again; there could be no
-mistake about it. There was the hollow boom of great
-seas breaking over banks of sand. I started up, and
-swung myself on the ledge of the bulwarks.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_142">[Pg 142]</span></p>
-
-<p>Not a quarter of a mile on our weather bow I could
-see a great bed of tumbling spray, which gleamed with a
-pale lustre in the dark.</p>
-
-<p>‘Breakers on the weather bow!’ I shouted. ‘Up,
-men, up! Keep her away, Tom, keep her away. Call
-all hands!—stand by sheets and brails—see all clear with
-the anchor.’</p>
-
-<p>In a moment the deck of the schooner was alive with
-startled men, I leaped forward, and flung myself on the
-bowspirit.</p>
-
-<p>‘Breakers right a-head!’ I screamed ‘Up with the
-helm—hard up.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Breakers on the lee bow!’ sung out two or three
-voices at once.</p>
-
-<p>We were embayed. The white water tumbled and
-roared all around us: I thought all was over, when right
-a-head I saw a space of dark sea. This might be our
-salvation.</p>
-
-<p>‘Hold your luff!’ I shouted—‘hold your luff! but
-keep her well in hand. So—steady.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Steady!’ replied Bristol Tom, and the schooner shot
-through a narrow channel—so narrow that the drifting
-foam of a great surge upon our weather bow flew over us
-in a salt shower. By this time the whole crew had
-tumbled out of their hammocks, and rushed upon deck
-half awake, and calling out to know what was the
-matter?</p>
-
-<p>‘Down with your helm—hard down!’ I cried again.
-The schooner swept up into the wind, and a great mass
-of foam seemed as it were to glide from beneath her
-bows.</p>
-
-<p>‘Breakers a-head!’ sung out Nicky Hamstring’s voice
-as the direction of the ship was altered.</p>
-
-<p>‘Keep her away again,’ cried Captain Jem and myself
-together. The bows of the manageable little vessel receded
-fast from the wind, when she sunk in the trough of
-the tumbling swell, with a jerk and a jar which appeared
-to shake her very ribs.</p>
-
-<p>‘She has struck!’ cried half the crew at once. But the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_143">[Pg 143]</span>
-next sea hove the ship buoyantly aloft; the wind came
-down with a heavy puff; she bent over before its influence,
-and for near five minutes rushed madly on amid the
-broken water which flashed and glanced upon either side of
-us; now, by a sudden twitch of the rudder, and a rapid jibbing
-of the sails, avoiding a reef, or spit of sand which lay
-directly across her course—anon, running along a belt of
-white water, until, mayhap, a sudden bend of the reef
-caused us to whirl the schooner right into the wind’s eye
-again, and try to beat slowly up the tortuous channels,
-expecting every moment to be flung with a crash upon a
-ledge of coral rocks. All this time the men were working
-to clear the anchor, and just as the schooner was hove
-into the wind to weather the corner of a long shallow
-point of breakers, our moorings were let go, our sails
-sharply brailed up, and we had soon the satisfaction of
-finding that we rode easily to our anchor in about eight
-fathom water, with a great labyrinth of sand-banks and
-low ledges of rock around.</p>
-
-<p>All this appeared to us like a dream; ten minutes
-before we had been ploughing along the open ocean, not
-dreaming that there lay land within three hundred miles
-of us, now we were in the midst of an immense and unknown
-shoal, and a flaw of wind, or a shift in the set of
-the currents which must traverse its intricate channels,
-might fling us on a bank of sand or rock, on which we
-would leave the bones of ship and men.</p>
-
-<p>Of course, our first business was to make our moorings
-as secure as possible. The Mosquito men, who have keen
-eyes, both by night and day, pointed out a dark lump
-upon our starboard bow, which we soon made out to be a
-low lying rock, and accordingly manning our light boat,
-we speedily carried out a warp, which we made shift to
-secure round a jagged projection of the reef, all clustered
-over with oysters and sea-weed.</p>
-
-<p>Meantime, Captain Jem, with Bristol Tom, and myself,
-and sundry of the oldest mariners, retired into the great
-cabin to examine the maps and charts. We certainly did
-not know the exact position of the schooner, for in the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_144">[Pg 144]</span>
-hurry of yesterday’s chase, no observation had been taken,
-but this we knew that no shoal or island, indeed no soundings
-at all, were laid down in our charts, near which we
-could possibly be.</p>
-
-<p>‘No, comrades,’ quoth Captain Jem, ‘here be rocks
-and banks, shoals and sands, which no mariner hath up
-to this time reported; although, mayhap, many a brave
-seaman hath found his long home amongst them.’</p>
-
-<p>We looked long and earnestly to the east, before the
-blessed light came out upon the ocean. At length the
-dawn grew pale in the sky, then a red, warm glow brightened
-above the waves; the thin night mists rolled away;
-the sea-birds came shrieking and clanging from their nests
-and holes, and we, truly, saw a lonely and desolate sight.
-All around the schooner, for miles and miles, was a pale
-greenish sea, laced, as it were, with bars and streaks of
-surf, which spread around like open net-work, and dotted
-here and there with great smooth banks of bright sand,
-and low, long reefs like jagged walls, rising now and then
-into a higher point of precipitous rock which showed, perhaps,
-some eight or ten feet above the level of the surf.
-The blue sea formed the framing of this dismal picture.
-As for the Spaniard he was nowhere to be seen, and,
-sooth to say, we thought or cared little about him. In
-regard to our own position, it was a miracle how we had
-by chance attained it; when I mounted the rigging and
-saw the great chaos of banks and spits of sand, and white
-belts of tumbling surf, through which we had reeled and
-staggered, as it were, blindfolded, without in the least
-knowing our course or the direction of the channels, I felt
-as if a miracle had been accomplished in our favour.
-Having got safely in, however, the question was now how
-to get safely out again, and so having called a council
-upon the deck, it was determined that the schooner should
-be made as snug as possible at her moorings, while the
-shallop, which was our smallest boat, went out to survey
-the shoal, and if possible hit upon a safe passage to the
-open sea.</p>
-
-<p>After breakfast, this plan was put into execution, and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_145">[Pg 145]</span>
-the charge of the boat was intrusted to me. The day
-was fine, the sea-breeze cooled the air. We put into the
-shallop some beef, biscuit, and a beaker of water, and
-rowed off in very tolerable spirits. Our first intent was
-to trace the route by which the schooner had arrived at
-her present anchorage; but the attempt soon bewildered
-us; one man was confident that we had passed to windward
-of this bank, while another maintained that we had
-run under its lee. Here was a reef which our bowman
-remembered to have observed perfectly well, while he who
-pulled at the stroke oar was equally confident that the
-schooner had never passed within a mile of it. We
-therefore gave up the idea of taking the ship out as
-we brought her in, and set to work to discover another
-passage into blue water. But sure such a hopeless range
-of shoals, banks, reefs, and dangerous points of rock, never
-bewildered poor mariners; sometimes we thought that
-we had hit upon a channel, but just as we were upon the
-point of finding our way clearly into the open ocean, a
-few specks of white water only seen when the sea fell into
-a trough at that place, would stretch across the route, and
-reveal the fact, that a ledge of pointed and pinnacled reef
-barred the way. Then the currents and sets of the tide
-puzzled us greatly, washing up one channel and down
-another, and boiling round the rocks in such a puzzling
-whirl of eddies and counter-eddies, that our boat was nigh
-stove more than once upon the sharp coral reefs. At
-length, after pulling the best part of the day, and landing
-upon many of the rocky plots, we made our way, with
-weary muscles and aching hearts, to the schooner, to report
-our ill success. We found that they had moored
-the vessel very snugly—that in case of accidents they had
-got the launch into the water, and that she lay in a snug
-little sandy cove, well sheltered from the swell, and, at
-half ebb, locked up, as it were, in a clear pool, like a shallow
-caldron.</p>
-
-<p>The afternoon passed away very dully. Captain Jem
-sent the small boat out again, with a fresh crew, to look
-for turtle and sea-birds; and it was determined that, next<span class="pagenum" id="Page_146">[Pg 146]</span>
-day, both the boats should start upon an exploring expedition.
-The turtling party soon returned with half-a-dozen
-fine turtles, and a great quantity of oysters; they
-had shot several ducks, but the greater quantity of birds
-they saw were noddies and sea-gulls, which they did not
-care to disturb.</p>
-
-<p>About an hour before sunset, the men were lounging
-under the awning which we had set, fore and aft, some of
-them fishing in the clear water beneath us, when, on a
-sudden, there was a great cry of astonishment raised;
-and looking up from the chart which I was studying, I
-saw a strange little man, so small, he might almost be
-called a dwarf, deliberately climbing over the taffrail. A
-dozen of our seamen rushed to lay hold of him, but he
-waved his hand, as though there was no necessity for
-violence, and jumped lightly down on deck.</p>
-
-<p>‘Where is the captain of this ship?’ quoth he, in a
-strange shrill cracked voice, and speaking English with a
-slight foreign accent. At this moment, Captain Jem came
-out of the main cabin and stared heartily, as indeed we
-all did, to see so unexpected and strange-looking a visitor.
-The creature—who was so queer and dwarfish a man,
-that, as I gazed upon him, I thought of old-world stories
-of Brownies and uncanny men of the moors—could not
-have been above four feet high. He had very broad
-shoulders, and such long muscular arms, that they looked
-like fore legs of an ape. His face was big and broad, but
-not by any means ugly. He had light blue twinkling
-eyes and long fair hair, and a beard of a flaxen colour.
-The little man’s dress was as strange as himself. He
-wore a broad hat, made of great ribbons of strong green
-sea-weed, very neatly plaited and wrought. He had a
-linen shirt, not of the cleanest, with a cloth cloak hanging
-round his loins, and bound with a broad belt of similar
-sea-weed to that which formed his hat, while on his legs,
-which were very short and thick, he wore a pair of coarse
-canvas drawers. His great brown splay feet were bare.
-When I say that this strange-looking apparition had a
-sort of necklace of coral, mixed with small pieces of gold<span class="pagenum" id="Page_147">[Pg 147]</span>
-and silver money hung round his neck; that his ears were
-weighed down with big silver rings; and that in his hand
-he carried a paddle, with a broad blade at each end, I
-have fully described to the reader the stranger who now
-advanced towards Captain Jem, pulling off his hat, and
-making a very polite bow. Not to be behindhand in good
-breeding, Stout Jem was nothing loth to return the
-salaam; after which, he asked the little man how the
-devil he had come on board.</p>
-
-<p>‘Look over the side and you will see,’ quoth the dwarf.
-We all rushed to the bulwark, and there sure enough was
-a light canoe most beautifully constructed, floating, as it
-appeared, on the very top of the water.</p>
-
-<p>‘Well, sir,’ quoth Captain Jem, ‘you seem a countryman
-of the most of us here, and you are very welcome.
-I can’t help, however, thinking that you must have
-dropped from the moon. Mayhap you are the man in it.’</p>
-
-<p>The dwarf waved his hand very impatiently, as who
-should say, a truce with your idle jeers, and then quoth
-he very solemnly—‘I am a pilot.’</p>
-
-<p>At this we all listened greedily enough.</p>
-
-<p>‘Well,’ says Captain Jem, ‘I can’t say that we are not
-in want of one. But whereabouts may we be? Is there
-land nigh; and what do you call these rocks and sands?’</p>
-
-<p>‘There is no land that I know of nigher than New
-Providence,’ answered the dwarf, ‘and it lies a good hundred
-leagues to the westward and southward; and as for
-these rocks and sands, I cannot tell you their name, because
-they have got none.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Then what ships come hither that you act as pilot for?’
-asked I.</p>
-
-<p>‘None at all,’ replied the little man, very briskly.
-‘There is nothing to take ships hither, unless it be a
-few turtle, and these they can get in far less dangerous
-places.’</p>
-
-<p>At this we all stared at each other, and the men murmured
-that the dwarf was mad; and Bristol Tom whispered
-that mayhap the creature had been marooned—that
-is, deserted—upon these rocks, and that he had lost<span class="pagenum" id="Page_148">[Pg 148]</span>
-his reason. After a short pause, however, the dwarf-pilot
-resumed his discourse.</p>
-
-<p>‘There never was a ship,’ quoth he, ‘which came to
-these shoals but stayed there. There be plenty of room
-for a navy to lie on these sands and reefs, and then the
-first gale of wind that comes, smashes them faster than
-e’er a ship-breaker in Limehouse.’</p>
-
-<p>Captain Jem now began to lose patience, so he cried
-very wrathfully.</p>
-
-<p>‘If you talk more riddles to us, little man, God smite
-me! but I will run you up to the yard-arm by the breech
-of your galligaskins, and so dip you into the brine, as
-men serve a mangy monkey!’</p>
-
-<p>‘Nay,’ answered the dwarf, ‘I came on board to help
-you out of a scrape. You are discourteous, so get you to
-sea as you best can.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Well, well!’ replied Captain Jem, ‘I was in the wrong;
-but tell us frankly, man, what you are, and how you come
-to live amongst these accursed shoals?’</p>
-
-<p>‘What I will do for you is this,’ quoth the dwarf—‘and
-I will do neither more nor less; I will pilot your ship out
-to sea, and I will ask nothing for it, but that you make
-me rid of you without loss of time.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Why,’ quoth I, ‘you must be very fond of solitude to
-propose anything of the sort; and if you obstinately
-refuse to tell us what you are, or what you do here,
-how can we trust the ship and all our lives to your
-management?’</p>
-
-<p>‘You will have me on board,’ said the dwarf, ‘and I
-give you free leave to hang me up by the neck, not by
-the breech, if I as much as scrape a barnacle from the
-bottom of the schooner.</p>
-
-<p>This proposition certainly looked reasonable.</p>
-
-<p>‘What will you do, when we get to sea?’ asked Bristol
-Tom.</p>
-
-<p>‘What is that to you, old man?’ quoth the dwarf; ‘go
-your ways, and leave me to go mine. I warrant I should
-have had more wit than to come blundering in here against
-my will.’</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_149">[Pg 149]</span></p>
-
-<p>‘So you landed here on purpose?’ says I.</p>
-
-<p>‘Whether I did or no,’ says the dwarf, ‘is nothing to
-you. Do you want a pilot, or do you not?’</p>
-
-<p>Here, Captain Jem whispered to me that there might
-be more in this scene than met the eye, and that we
-should do well to secure the strange pilot who crowed so
-smugly. I assenting, the captain tipped the wink to half
-a dozen of the crew, who thereupon advanced towards the
-little man. But he was sharper than we, for, observing
-what we intended, he made but two jumps, one upon the
-bulwark, and the other into the canoe below, the bottom
-of which I thought would be driven out by his weight;
-but not a bit of it—the little bark-built skiff gave a great
-surge, and then floated tranquilly a couple of fathoms
-from the side.</p>
-
-<p>‘Call you that seamen’s hospitality?’ says the little
-man, grinning.</p>
-
-<p>Captain Jem flew into a great rage. ‘Get your
-muskets, men,’ he cried; but directly after, controlling
-himself, he directed us to give chase in the shallop, and
-bring back the pilot by force. Anticipating this order,
-I leaped into the boat, and calling out for four young
-men, who were the best rowers and the most muscular
-and long-winded fellows in the schooner, they jumped
-into the shallop with great glee, just as the dwarf, thinking
-he might as well have a start, dipped his paddle into
-the water and glided away. We were soon in chase,
-straining at the oars with right good will, and sending
-the shallop dancing at a great rate through the sea.
-Meantime our shipmates on board the schooner mounted
-into the rigging that they might observe the race the
-better, and encouraged us with abundance of cheers
-and exhortations not to spare our muscles. We brought
-the boat gradually to its full speed, the canoe being
-then only a dozen or so fathoms a-head. The dwarf
-was kneeling in the bottom of his craft, striking the water
-alternately on either side with the broad double blades of
-his paddle. Of course he had his back towards us, but
-he went, as the Spaniards phrase it, ‘with his beard upon<span class="pagenum" id="Page_150">[Pg 150]</span>
-his shoulder,’ that is to say, constantly looking back, with
-a provoking grin upon his face. We soon found that if
-we caught the gentleman at all, it would not be until
-after a hot chase and a long one. But we gave a shout
-and buckled to our work in good earnest. Meantime,
-the dwarf seemed to keep ahead almost without an effort—his
-light vessel skimming the very surface, while our
-heavier shallop was driving the sea into tiny ridges of
-foam, and leaving a wake of dancing agitated water. So,
-encouraging my men to pull long and strong, and steady
-strokes, we flew at a great rate through the intricacies of
-the shoal, speedily leaving the schooner far behind. It
-must have been a brave sight for a spectator to see—the
-light canoe, with its strange rower, spinning along, followed
-through all its windings and doublings by the shallop,
-impelled by cracking oars and straining muscles.
-Now and then we would cross bays and creeks only
-partially sheltered from the swing of the sea, the canoe
-jumping as it were, over the broken and sweltering
-waves, like a cork upon the parchment of a beaten
-drum, while the shallop would plunge, and jerk, and
-thrash, amid the cross surges, taking them on board over
-the larboard and starboard gunwales at once. Still, I
-think we would have caught the dwarf, nervous as was
-his arm, and swift as was his boat, had it not been for the
-rapidity with which he could wheel her round and round,
-following the crooked channels, and threading the narrow
-and intricate passages of the shoal, while he managed all
-the time to keep the canoe at great speed. Of course our
-boat was not so handy. Our utmost endeavours would
-not always suffice to keep her clear of a spit of sand, or
-to alter her course in time to avail ourselves of a shortcut
-into which the canoe would suddenly diverge. At
-length, my men began to show symptoms of distress;
-they panted at their toil, and, looking over their shoulders,
-began to murmur that there was no use in chasing the
-devil. All this while, the pilot had never ceased his impudent
-grin, and he seemed to be as fresh as when he had
-started from the side of the schooner. At length, we<span class="pagenum" id="Page_151">[Pg 151]</span>
-found ourselves in a pretty long open passage, with impassable
-barriers of reefs on either hand. The canoe was not
-more than a few fathoms ahead, for as we had flagged in
-our efforts, so had the dwarf relaxed in his. I thought
-that now was the time for a grand push, and shouting to
-the men that the game was in our hands, the brave fellows
-made a great rally—the ashen staves of the oars
-cracked, the water buzzed and foamed, and in a moment
-the boats were not more than a few feet apart.</p>
-
-<p>‘Huzza, we have him now!’ I shouted.</p>
-
-<p>The men pulled like devils, the dwarf worked hard
-with his paddle; but nothing could keep before us
-in such a chaise—foot by foot, we overhauled the
-canoe.</p>
-
-<p>‘Three strokes more, comrades, and he is ours.’ The
-men shouted, but the breath had hardly left their lips
-when—crack!—the bows of the shallop went smash upon
-a submerged spit of sand. The men were flung higgledy-piggledy,
-head over heels, sprawling into the bottom of
-the boat, while a couple of oars snapped like pistol shots.
-We had run upon a bar which crossed the passage, some
-six inches under water. The canoe, thanks to her light
-draught, had floated over it unhurt, and was now lying a
-few yards a-head—the abominable little dwarf grinning
-more furiously than ever.</p>
-
-<p>‘If we had a musket in the boat, you should laugh on
-the wrong side of your mouth,’ I shouted, gathering myself
-up and wiping my nose, which was bleeding famously.
-One of our men caught up a broken shaft of oar and
-hurled it at the canoe. The little man, who was as quick
-as light in his movements, parried the missile with the
-broad blade of his paddle, and called out—</p>
-
-<p>‘Ho! ho! pretty fellows to think of taking a ship out
-to sea without a pilot, when they can’t row a boat without
-running their noses against a post.’</p>
-
-<p>The answer to this was a simultaneous salute from all
-the fragments of the broken oars, one of which, despite
-his adroitness, gave the little man a very tolerable thwack
-across the shoulders, upon which, not choosing to risk<span class="pagenum" id="Page_152">[Pg 152]</span>
-the consequences of another broadside, the dwarf called
-out—</p>
-
-<p>‘Good night; you had better pull to the schooner if
-you don’t want to sleep among the noddies and the
-boobies. Ho! ho!—good night.’</p>
-
-<p>He then coolly paddled off, whistling. To have attempted
-to follow him would be sheer nonsense. We
-had our wings, as it were, clipped, and if we could not
-catch the canoe with four fresh men and four oars, there
-was little chance of overhauling him with four wearied
-men and two oars, so we addressed ourselves to get back
-to the schooner. The chase had lasted nearly an hour,
-and upon looking around we saw the mast of the ‘Will
-o’ the Wisp’ at a distance which somewhat startled us.
-There was a flag flying at her main-topmast-head which
-we supposed was a signal of recall. We therefore began
-to retrace our course, manning the remaining oars double.</p>
-
-<p>‘I hope we may make the schooner, Will Thistle,’ said
-Edward Lanscriffe, one of the boat’s crew.</p>
-
-<p>‘So do I,’ said Paul Williamson, who tugged at the
-same oar with him; ‘it would be ill sleeping among
-desert rocks and sands, and them haunted too.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Haunted?’ said I, ‘what do you mean? Haunted
-by whom?’</p>
-
-<p>‘By whom but the dwarf who paddled that canoe,’
-answered the bowman, a sailor from Penzance.</p>
-
-<p>‘Why,’ quoth I, ‘do you think he is anything but a
-man like ourselves—only, perhaps, for the matter of
-that, a trifle shorter?’</p>
-
-<p>All the men shook their heads gloomily, and one of
-them replied—</p>
-
-<p>‘No, no; it is no mortal that lives alone amongst
-these reefs, and refused the help of Christian men to
-carry him away from the middle of the sea.’</p>
-
-<p>‘That is over true,’ quoth Paul Williamson, ‘and
-greatly do I fear that his coming boded no good to ship
-or crew. He ought not to have been allowed on board.’</p>
-
-<p>I tried to laugh at all this, but somehow I was startled
-and put out of spirits myself, not that I much heeded the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_153">[Pg 153]</span>
-fancies of the superstitious sailors, but the whole thing
-seemed to me so wild, and strange, and uncommon, that
-I mused and mused hardly knowing what to think of it.
-Meantime, we were making the best of our way to the
-ship; of course our progress was slow, for we had to fish
-out a channel amid the shoals, and the tide being then
-low, the task was the more difficult. The accursed dwarf
-seemed to have led us into the most puzzling nook of all
-the reefs. We rowed and poled, and sometimes waded,
-dragging the boat along slippery ledges of rock, or
-smooth banks of fine white sand; but the schooner was
-still separated from us by a good couple of miles of rock,
-and sand, and sea, when the sun went down, and in less
-than half an hour we were groping in the darkness. The
-ship then fired a gun, and hoisted a light to one of the
-mast-heads as a signal. The twinkle of this light was,
-however, so faint, that had we not observed the lantern
-run up, we might well have taken it for a star, and therefore
-I kept my eyes steadily fixed upon the tiny spark,
-intending not to let it get out of sight. Directing the
-men, therefore, how to row, and continually bumping
-against points of rock and sand, we jogged on until, just
-as we rounded a long belt of reef, along which we had
-been running, the rush of a current of the young flood
-tide, which had just began to set in, sheered the shallop’s
-bows violently round, bore us some yards away out of
-our course, and then tossing us into a sort of boiling
-caldron, or rather slight whirlpool, we were swung
-round and round until our heads were giddy, and every
-idea of our proper course gone. Pulling at last clear of
-this vortex, we tried to discover the signal-light from the
-schooner, but in vain. The sky was now gemmed with
-stars down to the very horizon, and we knew not where
-to look for the guiding ray. It was then that I recollected
-how easily I might have set the position of the schooner
-by the constellations, but I had not thought of doing so,
-and now it was too late. The men began to look startled,
-and one of them said, in a low voice—</p>
-
-<p>‘I told you so; no schooner for us to-night.’</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_154">[Pg 154]</span></p>
-
-<p>‘Why do they not continue firing guns?’ I muttered,
-impatiently. ‘Come, boys, let us give them a
-cheer.’</p>
-
-<p>The night was calm, and I thought our voices might
-be heard on board the ship, so standing up, and putting
-our hands trumpet-fashion to our mouths, we gave a long
-shrill halloo, and then listened intently. For a moment
-we heard nothing but the surging of the currents as the
-tide came washing along the channels of the reef, and the
-low sound of the surf outside. But then was heard distinctly
-the answering halloo. We shouted again, and
-shoved off in the direction of the voice, making very good
-way, for we had struck a tolerably open channel, along
-which the tide was setting fast. Presently we heard the
-hail again much closer.</p>
-
-<p>‘Come, come,’ quoth I, ‘Paul Williamson, you will
-swing in your hammock to-night, for all that is come and
-gone.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Boat ahoy!’ said the voice a third time. ‘Sheer to
-port, and keep along that belt of surf on your starboard
-beam. Have you caught the dwarf?’</p>
-
-<p>‘No, confound him!’ I shouted; ‘and we thought we
-should never have got to the schooner again. Why did
-you not keep firing?’</p>
-
-<p>To this no answer was given, and Edward Lanscriffe
-asked, in a low tone, which of our comrades it was who
-had hailed. This was a puzzler. We none of us knew
-the voice.</p>
-
-<p>‘Will-o’-the-Wisp, ahoy!’ I shouted. ‘Halloo!’ was
-the reply. ‘Why the devil don’t you come aboard?
-Have you fallen asleep over your oars?’</p>
-
-<p>‘We can’t see,’ we replied, standing up, and peering
-into the darkness. ‘Show a light, man—show a light!’</p>
-
-<p>Immediately a lantern gleamed ahead of us. We
-pulled towards it. It shone from a dark object. I was
-in the act of telling the men to lay on their oars, when
-grit, grit, grit! the boat’s keel scrunched upon the sand,
-and at the same time the lantern was extinguished.</p>
-
-<p>‘Ho! ho! Do you want a pilot? I think you do,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_155">[Pg 155]</span>
-indeed,’ exclaimed the shrill, cracked voice we knew so
-well.</p>
-
-<p>‘The dwarf, by God!’ ejaculated Paul Williamson.
-‘I told you so. It is a demon, and we are bewitched.’</p>
-
-<p>I was in a great rage. ‘You skulking vagabond,’ I
-shouted out, ‘wait till daylight to-morrow, and we’ll see
-whether an ounce of lead won’t catch that canoe of yours,
-quick as it is.’</p>
-
-<p>To this there was no answer made, although we sat
-listening for near ten minutes. What was to be done?
-We hardly knew; but anything was better than lying
-idly where we were. The night breeze now struck cold
-and chill; the men had been overheated at their oars,
-and their teeth began to chatter. There was a very
-cordial response of ‘Amen,’ therefore, as I said, ‘I wish
-we had put a bottle of brandy into the boat.’ For half
-an hour or so we pulled at random, the men whispering
-and muttering to each other, when I saw a faint flash in
-the distance, and presently heard the report of a gun.
-‘There goes the schooner, at length,’ I cried. The boat’s
-head was promptly put into the proper direction, and we
-recommenced our weary pull with something like energy.
-We must have been near the outward edge of the shoals,
-for the surf thundered loud, and great broken swells
-often came rolling past us in a multitude of uneven undulations.
-All at once the confounded voice of the dwarf
-hailed us.</p>
-
-<p>‘You are going the wrong way, my brave fellows. If
-you expect to reach the schooner on that course, you
-must pull the boat round the world, and carry her
-over Asia.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Never mind the spiteful creature,’ I said, in a low
-tone; ‘he is but attempting to mislead us. It is his turn
-to-night; it will be ours to-morrow, when the sun rises.’</p>
-
-<p>Ten minutes more elapsed, then another musket was
-discharged, almost due ahead. ‘See,’ I exclaimed, in
-great triumph; ‘we are keeping the exact course; we
-shall be on board in a jiffey.’</p>
-
-<p>Paul Williamson shook his head. ‘The schooner,’<span class="pagenum" id="Page_156">[Pg 156]</span>
-quoth he, ‘is anchored near the centre of the shoals, and
-you hear how heavy and how near the surf is beating.’</p>
-
-<p>I was somewhat troubled at this, I confess, but I saw
-nothing for it but to pull on. So we did, until having
-coasted for some time along a succession of rocks, on the
-opposite side of which the sea was running heavily, we
-suddenly shot out from beyond their shelter, and immediately
-the boat was hove up upon the crest of so high
-and long a swell, that we all exclaimed at once, that we
-were out in the open sea. Just then, the pernicious
-dwarf hailed again, his voice now seeming to come from
-astern.</p>
-
-<p>‘You are better pilots than I reckoned,’ shouted the
-spiteful atomy, ‘only that when you would keep at sea
-you come ashore; and when you would hug the land
-you start off right into the ocean.’</p>
-
-<p>This time, at all events, he was clearly not deceiving
-us, so we promptly pulled the boat about, and were soon
-in the comparatively smooth water of the reef. One
-thing we now knew pretty well—the dwarf was armed,
-for it must have been he who fired the muskets, and, not
-doubting but that his optics were far more accustomed
-to the darkness than ours, we thought it extremely probable
-that he might amuse himself by plumping a shot or
-two into the boat. This was not a comfortable idea to
-cherish, so I hailed at random—</p>
-
-<p>‘Pilot! pilot—ahoy!’ no answer. We repeated the
-summons a dozen of times, but heard no sound save the
-heavy beat of the surf and the wild cry of sea-birds.</p>
-
-<p>‘Why, the scoundrel has gone home to bed,’ quoth I;
-‘and, to tell you the truth, comrades, I think we may
-give up playing at blind man’s buff for the night, and
-wait peaceably until we see the schooner in the morning.’</p>
-
-<p>This counsel was followed. We presently found a
-sandy cove, in which we lay very snugly, and then, after
-setting a watch, dropped off to sleep, weary, hungry,
-thirsty, and vexed.</p>
-
-<p>The day dawned, and we speedily discovered the
-schooner, about as far off as she was when we lost sight<span class="pagenum" id="Page_157">[Pg 157]</span>
-of her after sundown, the evening before. A pull of an
-hour brought us alongside, upon which there was a great
-outcry to know whether we had caught the pilot, and
-why we had not returned betimes.</p>
-
-<p>‘Why,’ quoth I, ‘we could not see you in the dark.’</p>
-
-<p>‘There was a light all night at the main-topmast-head,’
-says Captain Jem.</p>
-
-<p>‘Yes, but we lost sight of it once, and then we could
-not tell your lantern from a star. Why did you not
-fire?’</p>
-
-<p>‘We were clearing away the bow gun,’ answered Captain
-Jem, ‘when we heard you fire a musket.’</p>
-
-<p>‘We fire! that was the dwarf. We had no musket.’</p>
-
-<p>‘By the Lord!’ says Captain Jem, ‘I think we are all
-bewitched among these cursed reefs, which no one ever
-saw or heard of before.’</p>
-
-
-<hr class="r10">
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XV">CHAPTER XV.<br><br>
-<span class="fs80">AT LENGTH THEY CATCH THE DWARF PILOT, AND HEAR<br>
-STRANGE THINGS TOUCHING A TREASURE.</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p>Preparations were now again made in order to discover
-a way out. My comrades would have me turn in and go
-to sleep, but I was too much excited to hear of it; and,
-accordingly, after breakfast I was in the shallop again,
-with four fresh men, including Nicky Hamstring and
-Bristol Tom. We carried with us fragments of light
-wood and great stones for sinkers, to buoy a passage for
-the schooner. There was no need of lead or line, for we
-could see to the bottom of the crystal water, even where
-it was many fathoms deep. We were thus engaged great
-part of the day, and being now working with something
-like method and regularity, we were making sensible progress
-in discovering a channel, when, just as I was setting
-one of our buoys, Nicky Hamstring grasped my arm,
-and whispered with a sort of gasp, ‘There—look there!’</p>
-
-<p>I followed his eye, and started up with delight. A
-long bank of sand, with ridges of coral, along which we<span class="pagenum" id="Page_158">[Pg 158]</span>
-had been skirting for some time, terminated in one of
-the largest and highest rocks we had seen. Indeed,
-when the tide was out, it seemed rather a rocky islet
-than a rock; but what directed our attention to it was a
-deep cleft, into which the sea ran, and in which, as in a
-cistern of water, floated the bark canoe of the dwarf pilot.
-The shallop was close alongside the sand-bank when we
-made this discovery, and Nicky and I leaped out of her
-into the shallow water like a couple of madmen, and
-screaming to our comrades to row for the little creek, we
-both scampered along the dry hard sand towards the
-rock.</p>
-
-<p>‘You secure the canoe,’ I called to Nicky; ‘the owner
-is not far from the nest; so, while Nicky went clambering
-along the steep shelves to the cove, I climbed up the
-ledges of the rock, slipping down now and then into
-cracks and hollows, which peeled my shins famously, but
-very soon arriving at the summit, from which I caught
-sight of the dwarf running with great speed round the
-base of the rock, and immediately gave chase, shouting
-out to our friend to surrender at discretion. But he
-took no notice, making as straight as he could for the
-cove, whence, doubtless, he expected to get clear off in
-his canoe. I seeing this, thought it unnecessary to risk
-my neck in order to intercept him, and so clambered
-leisurely down the rock laughing aloud, and calling to
-the dwarf that I had told him that our turn would come
-with daylight. Meantime, the little man went skipping
-over the rocks like a goat, never making a false step,
-until suddenly he came in sight of the cove, within which
-the shallop by this time lay alongside the canoe. Then
-he sent up a shrill cry of surprise, which my comrades
-answered with a cheer, and stopping short, appeared to
-pause for a moment, after which he made straight for a
-projecting shoulder of the rock, round which he speedily
-disappeared.</p>
-
-<p>‘Never mind,’ quoth I; ‘take care of the canoe, and
-we shall soon find him.’ So saying, I called upon Nicky
-and Bristol Tom to land, which they did, making their<span class="pagenum" id="Page_159">[Pg 159]</span>
-way to the projection, round which the dwarf had run,
-while I, following a steep cleft or split in the rock, which
-ran from near the top of it, down to a white sandy beach
-on the opposite side from the cove, descended rapidly.
-All at once, about half-way down, my eye caught the
-flutter of canvas, and immediately I discerned something
-like a tent, very snugly pitched in a nook of rock, about
-a couple of fathoms above high water-mark, with a sort
-of fence of barrels and boxes round it.</p>
-
-<p>‘Ho, ho!’ quoth I. ‘Here is the hermitage, at last.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Stop!’ says the shrill voice I had so often heard,
-‘stop there—as you value your life!’</p>
-
-<p>And thereon I descried the dwarf, with a long-barrelled
-Spanish gun in his hand, which he was in the act of lifting
-to his shoulder.</p>
-
-<p>‘Stop!’ quoth he again; and being unarmed, I had
-nothing for it, in prudence, but to obey.</p>
-
-<p>‘My friend,’ says I, ‘you may as well uncock that gun.
-Your canoe is taken, as you saw. My comrades are upon
-the rock. The schooner is not a mile off, and if you are
-fool enough to fire at me, hit or miss, I warn you that it
-will be the last time you will ever pull a trigger.’</p>
-
-<p>The little man paused a moment. ‘Let me alone, and
-I will let you alone,’ he said.</p>
-
-<p>‘No, no,’ quoth I. ‘You paid us the first visit, and
-we must show our good breeding by returning it.’</p>
-
-<p>The pilot considered for a brief space, made a passionate
-gesture with the air of a man deeply mortified, and then
-called out, at the same time grounding his musket—</p>
-
-<p>‘Come on. I will do you no harm.’</p>
-
-<p>So I descended and joined him, just as Nicky and
-Bristol Tom made their appearance on the beach below,
-having run round the islet. By this time we were close
-to the tent.</p>
-
-<p>‘Come in,’ says the dwarf; ‘I shall be more hospitable
-than you.’ The habitation consisted simply of a
-dry cleft in the rocks, over which a roof of canvas had
-been stretched, supported in the centre by a pole. For
-furniture there was a hammock, not slung, but laid upon<span class="pagenum" id="Page_160">[Pg 160]</span>
-the sandy floor, and a sea-chest, upon which lay a very
-complete set of astronomical instruments, with paper,
-pens, and ink, and a half-finished chart, which, appearing
-to be a plan of the shoals, I laid violent hands on at once.
-There was some common household stuff, such as knives,
-plates, and pots in a corner, and near them a good-sized
-water barrel.</p>
-
-<p>‘Well, gentlemen,’ says the dwarf, very politely, ‘behold
-you in my dwelling. What may be your pleasure?’</p>
-
-<p>‘Our pleasure,’ said I, ‘is that you shift your dwelling
-for a brief space, and sling your hammock on board the
-schooner.’</p>
-
-<p>‘I protest against being thus unlawfully carried away,’
-says the little man.</p>
-
-<p>‘You are at perfect liberty to protest,’ said I; ‘but
-you must go on board all the same.’</p>
-
-<p>The pilot gave a curious sort of grin, but did not seem
-disposed to resist our power. Nicky Hamstring then
-went to the top of the rock, and hailed our comrades to
-bring the canoe and the shallop round, which presently
-they did. Meantime I was considering within myself,
-whether by a careful overhaul of the little man’s dwelling,
-I might not be able to light on some clue to the motive—and
-it could not be a common one—which seemed to bind
-him to these desolate shoals. Resolving to take my own
-time and my own way in the search, I directed my comrades
-to put the pilot into the shallop and row aboard of
-the schooner, telling Captain Jem that I would follow in
-the canoe, after a careful search of the tent. They
-started off accordingly; the dwarf, who appeared to be in
-tolerable good humour, notwithstanding his capture,
-taking my place in the stern-sheets, and managing the
-tiller.</p>
-
-<p>As soon as they had disappeared, I commenced my
-inquisition. The chart of the shoals was very skilfully
-constructed, and neatly put upon paper, being very different,
-indeed, from the rude scrawls which seamen commonly
-trace, of coasts and islands. No indication, however,
-was to be observed of any harbour, or secure cove,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_161">[Pg 161]</span>
-the existence of which might make the reefs a place of
-refuge. I noticed, however, on the north-west corner of
-the shoals, a cross slightly traced with a pencil. Putting
-the chart in my pocket, I searched the hut thoroughly,
-raking up the sand which formed the floor; and also prying
-into the casks and boxes which surrounded the tent.
-These appeared to contain nothing save common coarse
-provisions. The contents of the sea-chest were clothes
-such as sailors wear, with one suit of a Spanish cut and
-fashion, in a pocket of which I felt something hard. Examining
-more closely, I found the object to be a small
-and old book, in the Spanish language, imprinted at
-Granada, in the year 1507, and purporting to be the
-‘Voyages and Perilous Journeyings of one Vincente y
-Tormes, who sailed on board the Caravel, called the
-Pinta, with the great Admiral Christopher Colon, or
-Columbus, for the Discovery of the New World.’ Looking
-over the contents of this volume, I found them to
-be accounts of divers voyages made between Spain and
-the West Indies, written in very bad and cramped Spanish,
-and containing but dry details of little interest.</p>
-
-<p>I was about to lay the volume down, when I noticed
-that it came very easily open towards the latter portion,
-as though that part had been peculiarly studied, and
-looking more closely, I saw that a leaf had been cut out.
-Towards the foot of the page preceding that which was
-missing, was a chapter with a title as follows—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0"><span class="smcap">Herein I discourse of the Perilous Loss of the Great</span></div>
- <div class="verse indent1"><span class="smcap">Treasure Ship Santa Fè, and of my miraculous escape,</span></div>
- <div class="verse indent1"><span class="smcap">being the only one of that ship’s company who, through</span></div>
- <div class="verse indent1"><span class="smcap">the special Grace of the Blessed Virgin, was preserved</span></div>
- <div class="verse indent1"><span class="smcap">out of a great danger.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Then followed the words of the narrative in this
-wise:—</p>
-
-<p>‘Now all things being in readiness, there was a great
-mass held, with other needful ordinances and prayers to
-the saints; and so, on the 14th of June, we loosed from
-the city of Porto Bello, intending to touch at St.
-Domingo, in the great Isle of Hispaniola, to receive the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_162">[Pg 162]</span>
-tribute from the caciques, and so thence across the ocean
-to Spain. But, alas, it fell out otherwise!—for being but
-six days at sea, with contrary winds, which here do blow
-continually from the north-west point of the compass, we
-did unhappily——’</p>
-
-<p>This was the last line of the page; the following leaf
-being, as I have said, torn out. The narrative recommenced
-upon the succeding page with these words:—</p>
-
-<p>‘Thus—thus was I—all praise to the holy saints,
-particularly to my patron St. Geneviève, and to the
-Virgin—rescued from my hopeless and miserable condition,
-and carried home to Spain, I being very heavy and
-desponding in that voyage, on account of the loss of all
-my shipmates, so that I vowed never to tempt the seas
-again, but rather to live on crusts and water ashore.’</p>
-
-<p>From the remaining chapters, which were few, it would
-seem that the author had kept to this resolution, for he
-narrated that he became a water-carrier and a servant to
-a priest, called Pedro Vronez, to whom he dictated the
-book. The perusal of what I have set down above, the
-reader will possibly guess, gave rise to a startling train of
-ideas in my mind, and putting the adventures of Vincente
-y Tormes in my pocket, I jumped into the canoe, the
-Mosquito-men having taught me the management of such
-cockle-shells, and was presently alongside the schooner.</p>
-
-<p>Captain Jem was leaning over the side, fishing with a
-hook and line.</p>
-
-<p>‘Well, what have you found?’ quoth he, as if he did
-not think that my search could have availed much.</p>
-
-<p>‘Pound!’ I echoed, clambering on board. ‘I have
-found what may well make our fortunes.’</p>
-
-<p>At these words, our comrades came running from all
-sides very eagerly.</p>
-
-<p>‘Where is the dwarf?’ quoth I.</p>
-
-<p>‘Oh, in the great cabin,’ replied the captain. ‘A
-sullen piece of goods, I warrant you. He refuses to
-speak a word.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Have him out,’ answered I; ‘and we will try to make
-him find his tongue.’</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_163">[Pg 163]</span></p>
-
-<p>And so, presently, Master Pilot was hustled forth upon
-the deck.</p>
-
-<p>‘Will you tell us,’ quoth I, ‘why you choose to live
-alone amongst these grim rocks?’</p>
-
-<p>The little man grinned, twisted his features, and
-answered never a word. The crew looked on curiously.</p>
-
-<p>‘Once upon a time, there sailed a Spanish treasure-ship
-from Porto Bello.’</p>
-
-<p>The dwarf pricked up his ears, and all the blood went
-away from his face.</p>
-
-<p>‘In which ship,’ I continued, ‘there was a mariner
-named Vincente y Tormes. But the ship had not been
-six days at sea, going to Hispaniola to receive the
-tribute of the Caciques, when it was lost upon certain
-reefs, <em>with the treasure on board</em>, and Vincente y Tormes
-of all the crew was saved, and carried to Spain, where
-afterwards he became a water-carrier and servant to a
-priest, named——’</p>
-
-<p>‘You need not trouble yourself to recite further,’ said
-the dwarf, with a shrug of the shoulders. ‘You guess
-my secret. I thought none of you had wit enough to
-pick the marrow out of that bone, but it was all my own
-fault. I came on board this schooner, and in doing so
-threw away, by one moment of folly, the fruits of years
-of labour and danger. Dolt that I was!—what could
-it matter to me whether you succeeded in blundering out,
-as you blundered in, or stayed here until the first heavy
-blow smashed your ship to powder on these coral reefs?
-It would have been all the same to me.’</p>
-
-<p>Having made this speech with great bitterness, but in
-a perfectly composed fashion, the dwarf sat down upon a
-coil of rope, and shrugged his shoulders almost as high as
-the crown of his head.</p>
-
-<p>The crew were now all in a hubbub, for they comprehended,
-more or leas, that there was the wreck of an
-ancient galleon upon the reef, and they knew that silver
-and gold are metals which brine rusts not.</p>
-
-<p>‘I suppose,’ quoth the dwarf, ‘that you will give me a
-fair share of the booty when we get it?’</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_164">[Pg 164]</span></p>
-
-<p>This they all proclaimed that they were very ready to
-do, and one or two of the more eager shook hands with
-the dwarf, who assumed a very sour smile.</p>
-
-<p>‘Now, then,’ quoth the captain, when the tumult was
-a little abated, ‘tell us somewhat more about this, and
-rely upon it we will deal justly by you. Who and what
-are you?’</p>
-
-<p>‘Why,’ quoth the dwarf, ‘my story is of the shortest;
-my name is Paul Bedloe, and I was born beneath the
-Peel of Douglas, in the Isle of Man; my father owning a
-small craft, which plied to Liverpool—a village on the
-Lancaster coast—I was brought up a sailor, but I liked
-better to write and cipher than to handle ropes and furl
-sails; and having, also, a great liking for geography and
-astronomy, I became a very good navigator, and going to
-London, settled at Limehouse, where I kept a school for
-teaching seamen the art of navigation. Growing somewhat
-tired of this business, however, I went several
-voyages to these seas with a captain who had been my
-scholar; and afterwards, returning to Europe, I wandered
-through many countries, taking great delight in Spain,
-where I found several interesting accounts left by the
-first discoverers of America of their voyages. One day,
-in the shop of a Jew in Cadiz, I discovered the book
-which you, sir’—turning to me—‘doubtless, found in my
-chest. One leaf of that work had a very particular
-interest for me, and from the time I first saw it, I have
-kept it carefully on my person.’</p>
-
-<p>With that the Manxman produced the missing page
-from his bosom.</p>
-
-<p>‘By the help of this,’ continued he, ‘I found out how
-the treasure-ship, Santa Fè, had been stranded upon an
-exceeding great shoal, and how a storm soon coming on,
-she had sunk in middling deep water, between two ledges
-of rock. The ship’s company having deserted her in
-boats, these were speedily swallowed up in the storm,
-save that one in which Vincente y Tormes sailed, and
-which survived the tempest, although it was driven far to
-leeward. The wind then taking off, a calm followed,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_165">[Pg 165]</span>
-during which all the seamen in the boat, with only the
-exception of Vincente y Tormes, perished miserably of
-hunger and thirst. He was himself nigh dead, when a
-caravel descried and picked him up; ultimately conveying
-him to Spain, where he settled, and went no more to sea.
-You may judge,’ continued Paul Bedloe, ‘whether I have
-not given a fair account of the missing page;’ and, handing
-the document to me, he continued as follows:—</p>
-
-<p>‘On reading what I have now stated to you, it occurred
-to me that, in all the maps and charts which I had seen,
-no mention had ever been made of any such shoals as that
-upon which the “Santa Fè” was wrecked, and I concluded
-that no ship had ever fallen in with them, save those
-which, like the Porto Bello galleon, had never returned
-to tell the tale. Hence, I concluded, that it was very
-possible that some fragments of the wreck might yet
-remain undisturbed, containing boundless wealth. With
-much ado, and by spending nearly all which I possessed
-in bribes, I got access to the documents in the archives
-of the Minister of Marine of Spain, and there I found the
-loss of the “Santa Fè” fully confirmed. She had sailed
-from Porto Bello, and had never been heard of again.
-This entry, mark you, was before the date of Vincente’s
-publication, while he, not having appeared to contemplate
-the possibility of recovering the foundered wealth, took
-no steps, and communicated with no one on the subject.
-After this, I carefully examined Vincente’s narrative, and
-compared with it the records of many voyages from Porto
-Bello and Carthagena to Hispaniola and Porto Rico, so
-that, at length, I satisfied myself that the shoals in
-question must, if they existed at all, be within a circle of
-fifty miles in diameter. I next communicated with a
-brother of mine in Bristol, touching the matter, and
-informing him that I intended to proceed to the West
-Indies in search of the shoals, and the wreck of the
-“Santa Fè,” conjured him, in case he heard from me
-again, to have a ship ready fitted out, to sail for the
-longitude and latitude which I would send him. I
-embarked at Cadiz, and landed in Porto Rico, which<span class="pagenum" id="Page_166">[Pg 166]</span>
-island I suspected of being almost right to windward
-of the shoals. Here I made acquaintance with a Welsh
-seaman, to whom I partly communicated my projects;
-and with the help of a negro and two Indians, very
-faithful attached fellows, we constructed a great “Piragua,”
-victualled her very well, and put off to sea. We cruised
-for a month with no success, and then were forced to run
-for the Samballas Islands, off Darien, for more provisions.
-Putting to sea again, after a three weeks’ voyage, we hit
-upon the spot we sought for. The weather was then
-exceeding calm, and we could see the bottom in the very
-deepest parts of the reef, so that on the eighth day of our
-search, we actually descried the remains of a great ship,
-wedged between two rocks, about five fathoms under
-water. Our Indians were brave divers, and speedily
-brought up pieces of carved wood, and two or three old-fashioned
-swords, which satisfied me that we had hit
-upon the wreck of an ancient Spanish vessel; for when
-we scoured the blades, we could read on them the word
-“Bilboa.” At length, after tearing a great deal of the
-wreck to pieces, the divers reported that they had come
-to many large chests, with great clamps of rusted iron;
-and one of these being wrenched open, a small ingot was
-seen lying just beneath the lid, which we soon found to
-be virgin silver. On this, I stopped further proceedings,
-and wrote a letter to my brother in cipher, such as we
-had agreed upon to use. This letter, my comrades in
-the “Piragua” started away with, designing to make
-Jamaica, and send it home by an English ship; while I,
-having an ample amount of provisions, and having found
-great basins in the rocks, which the rain filled with fresh
-water, determined to remain, until the “Piragua” returned
-from Jamaica, to watch over my treasure, and to study
-the best means of recovering it. In case of accident to
-the “Piragua,” I had a canoe, with which, in moderate
-weather, I was not afraid of reaching the land. I had
-been here just two months and three days, when, on
-waking one morning, I saw your schooner. Such, gentlemen,
-is my story from first to last.’</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_167">[Pg 167]</span></p>
-
-<p>You may be sure that there was great acclamation at
-these tidings of a ship-load of riches falling, as it were,
-into our mouths; but Captain Jem, who appeared to
-have his doubts of Mr. Bedloe, ordered his person, his chest,
-and hammock to be very strictly searched. Everything
-found, however, confirmed the story. There were several
-books upon navigation, and an old diary in which were
-entered divers sums in dollars, reals, and maravedis, which
-appeared to have been expended upon the Spanish officials
-at the office of marine. Besides this, the draught of a
-letter, addressed to Master Richard Bedloe, near the
-church of St. Mary, Redcliffe, in Bristol, corroborated a
-great portion of the dwarf-pilot’s story; so that, upon
-the whole, we began to believe him firmly. The ingot,
-he told us, the Welshman had taken to Jamaica to be
-assayed.</p>
-
-<p>By the time that all these particulars had been ascertained,
-the day was almost at an end, and it was determined
-that, with the dawn next morning, both the boats
-should start to the wreck, provided with due tackle, and
-having the Indians, who are excellent divers, aboard.
-Paul Bedloe’s hammock was swung in the great cabin,
-and a watch placed over him all night: but he appeared
-to sleep soundly, and to be but little affected by the
-probable downfall of his golden hopes. Indeed, so much
-was I struck with this, and so composed was the dwarf
-in confessing the whole matter to us, part of which must
-at all events be true, that I came to the conclusion that,
-despite of all his pretended candour and frankness, the
-fellow intended to play us a slippery trick after all; so
-that, confiding my suspicions to my comrades, Mr. Bedloe
-was informed that, five minutes after he had given any
-symptom of treachery, he would be dangling from the
-sprit of the mainsail. To this intimation, the only
-answer he vouchsafed was the old shrug of the shoulders.</p>
-
-<p>The night seemed long to many on board, and with the
-grey dawn the boats were manned, Bedloe sitting beside
-the captain in the launch, and directing the steersman.
-The dwarf told us that he would take the boats to the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_168">[Pg 168]</span>
-place where the wreck lay, which was near the open sea,
-by such a channel as the schooner could follow in. We
-therefore laid down buoys as we went along, it being determined
-that as soon as the launch reached the wreck, I
-should pull back in the shallop, and navigate the ship to
-the scene of action.</p>
-
-<p>And now, behold us, with shout, and joke, and laugh,
-like men who are to be speedily and marvellously enriched,
-pulling gaily for the sunken El Dorado. The
-morning mist was rising slowly from the ocean; the surf-ridges
-sparkled in the first glances of the hot sunlight
-and the white and grey sea-birds wheeled and screamed
-joyously overhead. The very rocks and sands bore a
-changed aspect in our eyes; instead of forlorn and dreary
-shelves of crag and shingle lying desolately in a far-off
-sea, we gazed upon them as the mystic beds of incalculable
-wealth: ‘The sea,’ we said, joyfully, ‘may not
-give up her dead, but she keeps a feebler clutch upon
-her gold. Courage, comrades, courage! we shall divide
-the ingots which were melted for the treasury of Old
-Castile.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Why may there not be more than one single castaway
-ship lying hereabouts?’ quoth our surgeon. And
-we echoed, ‘Why indeed?’</p>
-
-<p>At this juncture I noticed Paul Bedloe start and
-turn pale, just as he did when I told him his secret the
-day before. He recovered himself, however, directly,
-and it was not until after events had made me connect
-that start with the topic of conversation at the moment,
-that I realized all its significance and meaning.</p>
-
-<p>A pull of less than an hour brought us to the spot
-where Bedloe declared that the treasure of the Santa Fè
-lay hid. The shoal, to the southward extremity, where
-we now anchored the boats, split into two long branches
-or arms, having deep and sheltered water between them.
-It was on the weathermost or eastern of these banks,
-among spits of sand and jags of rock, that the remains of
-the ill-fated ship lay. Making fast a grapnel to a point
-of coral, we allowed the boats, under the pilot’s direction,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_169">[Pg 169]</span>
-to drift five or six fathoms to leeward, until they floated
-in a rather deep channel, or hole, well sheltered by the
-coral reefs from the motion of the sea.</p>
-
-<p>‘Now then,’ quoth Bedloe, ‘look beneath you.’ Immediately,
-we were all bending over the gunwales of launch
-and shallop, and presently, shading off the light with one
-hand, we saw, some five fathoms down, wavering and
-quivering through the clear cold water, the mouldering
-form of a ship of size. There lay the once graceful hull,
-bulged and split by the rocks, the bows broken off altogether,
-the quarter and stern firmly jammed in a crevice
-of the reef, and so uninjured that we could distinguish
-the quarter galleries and the outlines of the sculptured
-figures and medallions and carving. The deck had been
-partially broken up, and two or three cannon lay half
-upon the bulwarks, half upon the rocks. All three masts
-had been broken off close by the board, and their stumps,
-like the rest of the wreck, were encrusted with masses of
-shell-fish, and heaped, here and there, with wavy bunches
-of slimy sea-weed. Fish of many sizes and forms glided
-tranquilly between us and the foundered ship, and once
-or twice we saw a great flat ray rise up from the dark
-recesses of the hold, and glide like a plate of burnished
-copper along the deck.</p>
-
-<p>‘There, gentlemen,’ says Paul Bedloe, ‘you see I have
-dealt fairly by you. You look upon the Santa Fè, which,
-more than one hundred and sixty years ago, set sail from
-Porto Bello for Old Spain.’</p>
-
-<p>So, rising up, we gave a great shout, which, in a minute,
-we heard echoed by our comrades, whom we had left behind
-in the Will-o’-the-Wisp.</p>
-
-<p>‘Will Thistle,’ says the captain, ‘bring up the schooner
-directly, and for heaven’s sake, take care of her bottom
-against the reefs; we may have a freight of price to carry
-home in it.’</p>
-
-<p>So presently, having returned to the Will-o’-the-Wisp,
-and satisfied the eager demands of those on board, we
-very soon cast off our moorings, and the trade wind
-blowing steadily, we set our forestay sail and mainsail<span class="pagenum" id="Page_170">[Pg 170]</span>
-and began to run down the channel towards the launch.
-The way being well buoyed, and all hands working very
-smartly, and keeping a bright look-out, there was no difficulty,
-and little danger in making the run, and in less
-than an hour from the time I had left the launch, the
-schooner glided into the fork of deep water between the
-two tails of the reef, and then forging near the edge of
-the weathermost bank we furled our canvas, and the
-anchor plunged down, twelve fathoms to the bottom,
-sinking well into the soft sand, which here formed good
-holding-ground.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="r10">
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XVI">CHAPTER XVI.<br><br>
-<span class="fs80">HOW THE DWARF TURNS TRAITOR, AND OF HIS FATE.</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p>The launch lay at about a cable’s length distance, and
-Captain Jem hailed me to shove off the shallop again,
-and bring a couple of hand-leads, and some strong lines
-for the use of the divers, with one block of the pig-iron
-which we had for ballast, and a good stout rope attached
-to it. As we pushed off with these articles on board, we
-saw the naked, dusky forms of both the Mosquito Indians,
-poising themselves with their clenched hands above their
-heads upon the gunwale of the launch, when, after swinging
-and swaying their bodies for a moment or two, they
-sprang into the air together, and dived head-foremost
-down. By this time, so great was the eagerness, that
-half of the men were stripped as well as the Indians, and
-no sooner had the latter disappeared, than near a dozen
-stalwart fellows leaped overboard and dived after them.
-But our countrymen were none of them skilful enough in
-the art to descend through five fathoms of water and yet
-keep their eyes keenly open and their wits well about
-them; and as the shallop rubbed sides with the launch,
-their black, sleek heads and red, strained faces, began to
-appear puffing and blowing, like so many grampuses, all
-round the boats, and crying out that the water was too
-deep for them. One man alone, a slender, muscular<span class="pagenum" id="Page_171">[Pg 171]</span>
-young fellow, a Frenchman, who had been used, when a
-boy, as he told us, to dive from a pier, at Brest, for sous,
-alone brought up in his clutch a mass of slushy sea-weed,
-grasped from the stump of one of the masts.</p>
-
-<p>The Indians were, however, yet under water, and
-we were getting uneasy about them, when we saw their
-dark forms shooting between us and the foundered
-ship, and presently they stuck their black heads, for
-all the world like seals, above the surface, holding
-up their empty hands in token of their fruitless plunge.
-They had descended through one of the hatchways
-into the hold, and groped about there as they best
-could in the dim light, but except sheets of rotten canvas
-and masses of rusted iron, they found nothing. Upon
-this, Bedloe was immediately appealed to, as to the position
-of the precious coffers, and he declared that they lay
-very deep indeed, almost at the keel of the vessel, in the
-stern, having probably been stowed under the great cabin.
-He had not been down himself, he said, as an asthma hindered
-him from diving, but both of his Indians had crept
-through the deck at the after hatchway, and he fully believed
-their report.</p>
-
-<p>We now prepared to institute a fuller search, and with
-that view, making fast the great block of ballast-iron to
-the rope, we hove it overboard. The ponderous lump of
-metal fell upon the high quarter deck, and crashed through
-the rotten wood, into the cabin beneath, starting whole
-shoals of flat-fish and eels, which glided and wriggled
-away, and sending up to the surface a boiling volume of
-thickened and turbid water, with little chips of wood, and
-ends of rope, which, thanks to pitch and tar, had remained
-unsaturated with moisture. We waited for a
-short time until the sea had cleared, and then Blue Peter
-and his comrades fastened the two hand-leads round their
-waists, leaving the other extremities of the lines attached
-to them in our hands, and then going gently over the side
-of the boat, grasped the downward leading rope and slid
-along it, just as though it had been a back-stay, until they
-disappeared beneath the shipwrecked vessel’s decks, we,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_172">[Pg 172]</span>
-of course letting out the lead-lines as the divers proceeded.
-A moment of great anxiety followed, and I observed that
-the dwarf instead of having his eyes fixed, like most of
-us, upon the water, was looking about him very nervously,
-fidgeting upon his seat, and moving and rubbing his
-fingers, and biting his lips, as people do who fear detection
-of misdeeds. Presently, the Indians again ascended
-to the surface, and again empty handed. There
-were nothing like chests or coffers they said—only casks,
-which being quite rotten, they had broken into and found
-them full of flour, hard caked with the wet. There were
-also some old fashioned carbines, a great grindstone, a
-quantity of rotten cables and hawsers, a small brass cannon,
-and a great unnameable mass of mouldering material,
-which stirred when it was trodden upon, and blackened
-the water, so that, after a few moments, the Indians
-could see no more.</p>
-
-<p>At this information, there were many threatening
-scowls cast upon the Manxman, but he bore them firmly
-enough.</p>
-
-<p>‘Well, Paul Bedloe,’ says the Captain, ‘what say you
-to this?’</p>
-
-<p>‘I presume your divers are not so expert as mine—that
-is what I say,’ answered the little man, coolly
-enough.</p>
-
-<p>At this Blue Peter fired up.</p>
-
-<p>‘I say—dere are no coffers or treasure at all dere!’
-exclaimed the Indian: ‘and Massa Captain Jem here
-believe Blue Peter, who never told him a lie—oh, never,
-not at all.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Yes, Blue Peter, I do believe you,’ replied Captain
-Jem; ‘and if the prisoner here be dealing falsely with
-us, on his own head be the peril.’</p>
-
-<p>This was the first time that the Captain had called
-Bedloe the ‘prisoner,’ and the little man started at the
-phrase, very perceptibly, but he only said—</p>
-
-<p>‘I tell you what my Indians told me; and one of them
-brought up an ingot of silver to prove that his words were
-true.’</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_173">[Pg 173]</span></p>
-
-<p>I was, meanwhile, musing whether I should not try a
-dive myself. I remembered that I had been tolerably
-expert at the exercise, when a boy, and so, stripping and
-buckling a hand-lead to my loins, as I had seen the Indians
-do to aid their descent, I plunged overboard into
-the tepid sea, and grasping the rope, found that I
-descended rapidly and easily, and that the water was so
-transparent, that I saw above me the keels of the boats,
-and below me the form of the cast-away ship, as clearly
-as though I gazed upon them through the gloaming of a
-Scottish summer’s evening. It was a curious sensation,
-that of clinging to the rope in the mid sea, with the water
-like a mass of thick green air, wavering and gurgling
-about me, and the indistinctly-seen forms of fishes gliding
-hither and thither, like little opaque phantoms,—and as
-strange was the feeling when I placed my foot, as though
-my body had no weight, upon the slimy deck, and felt
-the feathery sea-weed rise upwards at the pressure, and
-cling and wave about my legs. All this, of course, passed
-in a moment, and in the next I had descended through
-the after-hatchway, and steadying myself with my feet
-upon the lump of pig-iron, I had time to cast a hurried,
-but observant glance around me. A considerable portion
-of the deck had been torn away, or broken up, by the fall
-of the pig-iron, and down the aperture came a dull greenish
-light, showing the dim outline of great ribs of wood,
-and masses of timber-work, bulged and broken, with fragments
-of the rock projecting, here and there, through the
-crushed and splintered masses. Around me lay piled up
-rotting casks, and the fragments of bulkheads, and the
-smouldering remains of furniture. I saw the holes where
-doors had led from cabin to cabin, sea-weed came waving
-through them. Shell-fish clung in clusters to what had
-been the rudder-case, and to rusty iron-work, which as I
-moved, upon the rotting wood and hemp, hurt my feet.
-Sprawling along the wreck, and rousing slimy fish from
-their lurking-places, I made my way to where I saw the
-sheen of glimmering metal, and presently I clutched what
-was the brass box of a compass. Then throwing off my<span class="pagenum" id="Page_174">[Pg 174]</span>
-leaden sinker, I burst my way out of a quarter-gallery
-window, and rose rapidly to the surface, almost spent for
-want of air,—holding the compass above my head. It
-was a minute after I had breathed, before the loud ringing
-in my ears enabled me to hear the shouts of my comrades.
-They had seen the glimmer of the metal as I rose,
-and very naturally took the brass for gold; but they were
-soon undeceived, and after I had been hauled on board,
-and had time to examine my prize, I undeceived them
-still further, for I saw a name and a date upon the implement.</p>
-
-<p>‘So, comrades,’ I exclaimed, ‘the little man is playing us
-false. The Santa Fè must have been lost before the year
-1507, and upon this compass case is written, “Ericson.
-Amsterdam, 1645.”’</p>
-
-<p>At this, there was a loud shout of wrath, and the seamen
-turned in fury to the dwarf; but he preserved a
-wonderful boldness,—all the nervous agitation was gone,
-and though he was pale, neither hand nor lip quivered.</p>
-
-<p>‘This is not the wreck of the Santa Fè,’ thundered
-Captain Jem, ‘and we were dolts to take it for such.
-Timber must have mouldered away in half the time this
-vile dwarf would have us believe that the ship beneath us
-had lain under water. But take care,’ and the captain
-turned to Bedloe and shook him soundly,—‘take care how
-you trifle with us, or, as you seem so fond of this wreck,
-by God, you shall lay your stunted bones in it.’</p>
-
-<p>Paul Bedloe seemed prepared for this burst, for he said
-very calmly—‘I have told you what I know, and if you
-are deceived, it is because I was beguiled myself. The
-Indians spoke falsely.’</p>
-
-<p>‘And the ingot—the silver ingot!’ shouted half a dozen
-of the men.</p>
-
-<p>‘That I saw with my own eyes brought up from the
-water,’ replied Bedloe; ‘and he who recovered it said that
-there was much more where that came from.’</p>
-
-<p>I looked hard into the dwarf’s eyes. He bore my gaze
-for a minute steadily enough, and then tried to turn
-away.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_175">[Pg 175]</span></p>
-
-<p>‘You have lied in your throat!’ I cried—‘you have lied,
-and you know you have lied. There are two wrecks on
-the shoal.’</p>
-
-<p>‘There may be a dozen for all I know,’ said the little
-man very stubbornly; ‘you may drown me if you will,
-but that will not put you nearer the treasures of the
-Santa Fè.’</p>
-
-<p>Captain Jem paused and looked round upon the men,
-as though he were collecting their thoughts. Just then,
-the boatswain hailed from the schooner that the weather
-was getting very ugly to the southward. We all looked
-up, and saw an ominous black cloud lying looming
-upon the sea, its upper edges gilded with a lurid glow,
-as though edged with red-hot iron. The regular trade
-wind, too, had ceased to blow, except in faint sickly puffs,
-and the schooner began to rise and sink upon great swelling
-undulations from the southward, so that loose ropes
-and blocks shook and rattled, and the gaffs of the foresail
-and mainsail swung to and fro with a creaking, wheezing
-sound. It was clear that something unpleasant was
-brewing.</p>
-
-<p>‘Fasten a spare oar to the line,’ says the captain,
-pointing to the rope which descended to the wreck, ‘we
-may as well buoy the place.’ His directions were obeyed.</p>
-
-<p>‘Now, pull for the schooner. Lash that man’s arms
-there with a bit of spun-yarn; he has brought it upon
-himself.’ And in a minute we were safe on board, and
-the dwarf, who made no resistance, was thrust well
-pinioned into the cabin.</p>
-
-<p>‘We have no time to trifle,’ said the captain; and so we
-all thought, precious moments had been lost, without the
-symptoms of the weather having been attended to.</p>
-
-<p>‘We were looking for the gold,’ said the captain.</p>
-
-<p>‘And we were looking at you,’ replied the boatswain.
-In ten minutes the anchor was up, the boats hoisted in,
-the sails set double reefed, and the schooner beating to
-the southward against heavy puffs of wind and a great
-tumbling swell. Our object was to weather either of the
-branches or horns of the shoal, then we could either scud<span class="pagenum" id="Page_176">[Pg 176]</span>
-or lie to, having plenty of sea-room. What we feared
-was, that the force of the squalls would strike us before
-we got clear of the fork in which we were embayed.
-Meantime the sky was growing every moment of a more
-lurid colour, as though the arch of heaven had been a great
-vault of brazen metal, and the surf was breaking in awful
-surges upon the reefs.</p>
-
-<p>‘Captain,’ says Bristol Tom, who was at the tiller,
-‘we shall not weather the point; the wind heads her
-every moment.’ And as he spoke, the sails flapped like
-thunder, and a great swell lifted the schooner and flung
-her bodily back a dozen fathoms. One of the men from
-the forecastle cried at the same time that the wind was
-coming, for that the sea was breaking white about a
-league away.</p>
-
-<p>‘We must run back through the shoal,’ says I.</p>
-
-<p>The captain paused a moment. ‘There is no other
-hope,’ quoth he. ‘Fetch the dwarf on deck;’ and
-immediately Bedloe made his appearance, and gazed
-anxiously at the weather. Captain Jem went below.</p>
-
-<p>‘You offered to pilot us already,’ I said, ‘and you
-know the shoal well. I have seen your chart of it. You
-must bring us through now.’</p>
-
-<p>Captain Jem at this moment returned on deck, carrying
-two large pistols.</p>
-
-<p>‘If the schooner as much as scrapes a ridge of sand,’
-says he, and he pressed the muzzle of one of the pistols
-so hard upon the dwarfs forehead, that when he took it
-away there was a round blue ring left above the eyebrow;
-‘if the schooner as much as taps one oyster upon the
-coral, you cease to live!’</p>
-
-<p>‘That is no news,’ answered the dwarf, with the old
-shrug of the shoulders; ‘if the schooner strikes we all of
-us cease to live. Pooh, pooh, man! bullying avails not
-now. We are all of us more near being drowned than I
-am of being shot. Put up your pistols.’</p>
-
-<p>I declare I positively began to admire the dwarf. His
-cool courage was heroic. Captain Jem turned all manners
-of colours, whistled, grinned, then tried to appear stern;<span class="pagenum" id="Page_177">[Pg 177]</span>
-and at last stuck the pistol into the waistband of his
-trousers, looking rather sheepish than otherwise. Then
-there was a pause, which the dwarf broke by saying in
-the old jeering tone—</p>
-
-<p>‘Well, captain, do you want a pilot?’</p>
-
-<p>‘Do you undertake to run the schooner through
-these shoals into the open sea to the northward?’ I
-replied.</p>
-
-<p>‘Why, I told you from the first I would run you into
-the open sea,’ says the imperturbable Mr. Bedloe.</p>
-
-<p>‘Take charge of the schooner, then,’ quoth the
-captain.</p>
-
-<p>‘Unloose my arms,’ answered Bedloe. ‘I ought to
-have as good a chance as the others.’</p>
-
-<p>The captain hesitated.</p>
-
-<p>‘Wounds, man!’ cried the dwarf; ‘I give you my
-word of honour I am not going to take the schooner from
-you.’</p>
-
-<p>The cool impudence of the fellow was amusing; and
-so, stepping forward, I cut the rope-yarns which bound
-him.</p>
-
-<p>‘Now, then,’ quoth he to Bristol Tom and the captain,
-both of whom stood by the tiller, ‘look sharp for the
-pilot’s orders.’</p>
-
-<p>The Manxman stepped to the weather-beam, looked
-earnestly to windward and then aloft; after which he
-walked back whistling. The schooner was labouring
-heavily upon the swells, and the sky getting wilder and
-wilder.</p>
-
-<p>All at once, the man at the mast-head shouted—‘A
-sail!’</p>
-
-<p>We were all of us startled at the news.</p>
-
-<p>‘Not the Spanish frigate, Johnson?’ said I.</p>
-
-<p>‘No, no,’ returned the seaman. ‘It is a sort of boat—a
-big canoe. I can only see her when she lifts on the
-sea; but she carries a high mast forward, with a small
-mizen astern, and she is edging in for the side of the
-shoals. By God, sir, she is among them!’</p>
-
-<p>I was standing by the dwarf as we heard this. He<span class="pagenum" id="Page_178">[Pg 178]</span>
-leaped upon the bulwarks, clambered a few feet into the
-rigging, and then dropped upon the deck, exclaiming:—‘The
-Piragua!’</p>
-
-<p>‘What!’ says the captain, ‘your Piragua with the
-Indians and the Welshman?’</p>
-
-<p>‘That and no other,’ answered Bedloe. ‘You see,
-gentlemen, I have told you no lies.’</p>
-
-<p>‘The canoe is running for the lee of the large rock,
-where the dwarf lived,’ cries the man in the rigging.</p>
-
-<p>‘Then, by the Lord, they are more in love with
-coral reefs and sand-banks than I am!’ replied Captain
-Jem.</p>
-
-<p>‘I don’t know that they bean’t right, captain,’ cries
-the boatswain. ‘That rock is big enough to make a good
-shelter under its lee; and there’s a little cove there, if
-they can make it, where the small canoe was, where an
-undecked craft will be much snugger in such weather as
-this than out in the open sea.’</p>
-
-<p>I was of the same opinion as the boatswain, and so I
-could see was Bedloe. All this time we continued head
-to sea, thrashing away at the great surges, and just holding
-our own.</p>
-
-<p>‘Pilot!’ cried the captain, ‘why do you not run through
-the channel at once, without waiting for the strength of
-the squall?’</p>
-
-<p>‘Because, captain,’ answered the little man, very
-promptly—‘because the wind comes in puffs, with lulls
-between; and neither I nor any other man can take a
-ship through these banks unless he has her in full
-command.’</p>
-
-<p>This was so reasonable that there was no more to be
-said, and we waited impatiently for the decisive minute.
-At length it came. A heavy dank breath of air increased
-gradually but surely, until the schooner careened over
-heavily before it. The horizon to windward was becoming
-more and more obscured, the waves broke into white
-crests round us, and Bedloe signed to put the helm up
-and keep the schooner away. As the head of the ship
-fell off, and the sheets of the two great sails tore and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_179">[Pg 179]</span>
-struggled as they were being eased off, the pilot cried to
-Captain Jem that he would run the schooner close past
-the rock where his tent was, for that the most direct
-channel lay by it. Captain Jem told him that the ship
-was now under his charge; and at the same time emphatically
-slapped the stock of the pistol in his belt, as a
-hint that the charge was a responsible one.</p>
-
-<p>In less than five minutes, we were running fast among
-the breakers. The squall was now blowing fiercely, with
-pelting rain, which mingled with the flying brine, torn up
-from the foaming tops of the breakers. The sea ran
-strange and broken in the channels of the reefs, jumping
-and tumbling about, furrowed and rent by the fury of the
-wind, and the cross sweeps of the great surges, which the
-lines of reef flung into different directions, and often
-caused to sweep round and round in great seething
-cauldrons of foam. Through this howling waste of
-waters the schooner flew like a meteor, plunging along
-the white tops of the seas, diverging now to one side, now
-to another, as the skilful eye of the pilot directed; all her
-motions kept thoroughly in hand, and leaving reef after
-reef, each avoided by a dexterous jerk of the helm, lying
-foaming behind.</p>
-
-<p>We were now in the thick of the shoal. Ahead of us,
-and on the starboard bow, the rock which had been the
-dwarf’s habitation, rose blackly out of the water. I saw
-by the course that we were steering that we would shave
-it closely, and I sprang into the fore-rigging to keep a
-sharp look out. As I did so, I saw the mast of the
-‘Piragua’ rocking beyond the coral ledge—the canoe
-being evidently well sheltered in the lee of the rock.
-The squall now grew heavier and heavier, and on we drove
-in the thick of it, the sea flashing and hissing around us.
-We were close upon the reef. I could have touched the
-coral with an oar, as the receding wave poured down its
-jagged ledges, when all at once Bedloe shouted with a
-voice, which, though shrill, was as clear as a trumpet—</p>
-
-<p>‘Starboard—hard a starboard!’</p>
-
-<p>I started round at the sound; and just at that moment,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_180">[Pg 180]</span>
-as the schooner’s bow sheered to port, I saw the form of
-Bedloe, one instant poised upon the bulwark, and the
-next projected by a desperate leap into the air, and
-plunging amid the silvery tumult of the surges; into
-which, however, the dusky form had not yet vanished,
-when Captain Jem’s pistols flashed and exploded with
-two rapid reports. Instinctively I turned ahead. The
-pestilent dwarf had by his last order sought to wreck the
-ship. Before us lay a barrier of coral, over which the sea
-poured, as a mighty river flashes over a weir.</p>
-
-<p>‘Port—hard a port—for the love of life—port!’ I
-roared.</p>
-
-<p>It was just in time; the schooner surged round from
-the reef, struggling and plunging in the tempest, and
-then shooting along the rock. We saw the piragua
-tossing on the broken water, and one of the naked crew
-in the act of leaping overboard with a line, no doubt to
-the aid of the dwarf, whose head, as he swam skilfully and
-strongly, favoured by the eddy, rose every minute upon
-the tops of the uneven and broken surges.</p>
-
-<p>A hoarse shout of rage burst, in one inarticulate cry,
-from every one on board the schooner, but we had our
-own lives to look after. Fortunately, we were now in the
-channel which I had been in the act of buoying, when we
-discovered the dwarf’s retreat. My marks I could not,
-of course, discern; but I well knew the general lie of the
-reefs, and keeping my station in the weather-fore-rigging,
-I mustered all my coolness to con the ship. We had a
-dozen of hair-breadth escapes as we flew along. Very often
-the squall blew with such fury that the whole surface of
-the sea, deep and shallow, was of the same whiteness.
-Then a temporary lull would enable me to see the whereabouts
-of the ledges and banks, which I had already
-surveyed, so that I was enabled to shout my directions to
-Captain Jem with something like confidence. But after
-all, it was terrible guess-work. A sharp eye to watch, a
-skilful hand to work the ship, a steady heart to keep that
-eye bright and that hand firm, were what we needed, and
-that happily we possessed, so that after near half an hour,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_181">[Pg 181]</span>
-during which we stood with hands clenched and teeth set,
-no man daring to draw a full breath, we shot out from
-the bosom of shoals, and knew from the heavy rolling of
-the swells that we were in deep water, and in the
-open sea.</p>
-
-<p>Lucky for us, it was not until then that the full fury of
-the squall came roaring down. The sky grew well nigh
-as mirk as midnight, and the tempest hurtled through the
-air like the sweep of chariots and mighty squadrons in
-the clouds.</p>
-
-<p>‘In with all! furl and brail—furl and brail!’ shouted
-Captain Jem.</p>
-
-<p>Happily, sail is easily taken off a fore-and-aft-rigged
-vessel. The struggling and flapping sheets of canvas
-were rapidly secured, the gaffs were lowered down upon
-deck, and the schooner was speedily running under bare
-poles dead to leeward. The squall, meanwhile, increased
-until it became almost a hurricane: the great waves
-were beaten down flat by the sheer force of the wind.
-We rushed along, the tempest whistling and howling in
-the rigging in the centre of a roaring bed of foam, which
-the wind caught up and drove through the air in clouds
-which almost blinded us. Presently, a blue flash of
-forked lightning tore through the blackness of the sky,
-accompanied by a fearful roar of thunder, and then flash
-followed flash, and peal succeeded peal, until, what with
-the tumult of wind and sea, the lashing of the rain, mingling
-with the brine, and the incessant bellowing of the
-thunder, it was no easy matter to give or to hear orders.
-As the rain poured down heavier and heavier, the fury of
-the wind abated. Presently there were lulls, and the
-sea began to rise and heave around. At length there
-fell upon us such a deluge of rain, that had the hatches
-been off, I am confident that in half an hour the ship
-would have foundered. The rain continued for some ten
-minutes, and then the great clouds broke up, and rolled
-hither and thither, showing streaks of blue sky, and
-cracks, as it were, through which the sunlight came
-slanting down athwart the gloom, tinging long strips of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_182">[Pg 182]</span>
-angry foaming water with its red fire. This was the
-break-up of the tornado, which had not lasted, in its
-strength, more than ten minutes, and, in an hour, we
-were under single-reefed sails, beating up against a
-heavy sea for the shoals again.</p>
-
-<p>We had now leisure to converse upon the conduct of
-Bedloe, which appeared to many of us to be strange and
-mad, but I saw a consistency and a purpose in it all
-through. The great error the dwarf had made was in
-coming on board of our ship; but I admired the cool candour
-with which he had disarmed our suspicions by telling
-us so much of what was true of his story, as soon as
-he imagined that I held the clue to the secret. Furthermore,
-I did not doubt that, had it not been for the
-appearance of the piragua in the nick of time, he would
-have carried us clear of the banks, but knowing that she
-was in the lee of the rock, and being well acquainted with
-the eddies of the reef, he had determined, by one bold
-push, to drown us and save himself. Opinions differed
-as to whether the piragua would not have been driven
-from her shelter in the full force of the hurricane, but
-there was only one sentiment as to the punishment
-which Bedloe deserved, and which, if ever he fell into
-our hands, we fully determined that he would receive.
-Meantime we were gradually working up to the shoal,
-and an hour before sunset we saw the long line of
-breakers, dotted here and there with dusky beads of
-rock, stretching out amid the blue rolling seas. You
-may be sure that many an eye was strained to make out
-the piragua. I got into the main-top with the best glass
-in the ship, and although it was difficult to make out
-anything with exactness, by reason of the violent motion
-of the schooner, yet I was pretty well convinced that the
-canoe was not under the lee of the ‘Dwarf’s Rock,’ as
-we called it; and, furthermore, that the crew had not
-landed there, for the canvas of the tent was torn, and
-streaming in tattered ribbons into the air.</p>
-
-<p>It was just before sundown that we learned the fate of
-the dwarf and his comrades. A great wave rising between<span class="pagenum" id="Page_183">[Pg 183]</span>
-us and the broad red disc of the sun as he set
-amid a streak of hazy vapour, we observed a black object
-tossing on the very crest of the sea. We trimmed the
-schooner’s course for this dim speck, and after losing and
-regaining sight of it many times, at length made out
-that it was a boat or canoe, waterlogged and abandoned.
-The sun was now beneath the horizon—the speeding
-twilight of the tropics was waning fast away. The stars
-were already glimmering, and the leaden-coloured sea,
-with its great dusky opaque waves, rolled blackly and
-hoarsely around us; when the schooner, plunging into a
-trough, swept within a couple of fathoms of the wreck.
-It was that of a large piragua, bottom upwards, part of
-her bows torn away, where she had crashed down upon a
-reef. As we went plunging by, a surge from our bows
-splashed over the piragua, and, rolling her round, as she
-wallowed log-like in the water, we all recognised the
-drowned corpse of Paul Bedloe lashed to the stump of
-the mast, his nerveless legs and arms jerking about with
-the wash of the water, his blue eyes open and staring,
-like the eyes of a fish, and his light hair now floating out
-when the sea rose above him, and anon, when it subsided,
-settling down and clinging round his white dead
-face. With the next heave of the sea the canoe turned
-over as it lay when we first saw it, and then drifted away
-down into the gathering darkness of the night.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="r10">
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XVII">CHAPTER XVII.<br><br>
-<span class="fs80">OF THEIR UNSUCCESSFUL SEARCH FOR THE SUNKEN TREASURE—WEARYING</span><br>
-<span style="margin-left: -12em;" class="fs80">AT LENGTH OF THE UNDERTAKING, THEY PURSUE</span><br>
-<span style="margin-left: -7em;" class="fs80">THEIR COURSE—THE LEGEND OF ‘NELL’S BEACON,’ OR THE</span><br>
-<span style="margin-left: -29.25em;" class="fs80">‘CORPUS SANT.’</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p>For three weeks and better did the ‘Will-o’-the-Wisp’
-lie off and on by the shoals. For three weeks the launch
-and shallop were day by day employed searching and
-dragging the reefs, but we found no treasure-wreck.
-The remains of the ship to which Bedloe had conducted<span class="pagenum" id="Page_184">[Pg 184]</span>
-us were thoroughly searched, indeed the deck was altogether
-torn up, and some trifling amount of Dutch coin,
-with two good iron guns, and the small brass cannon
-were recovered, but we gained no richer prize. Day
-after day, even when the glare of the sun was at its
-fiercest, might our boats be seen floating along the channels
-of the reef, two men at either bow, leaning over the
-gunwale, so that their eyes were removed only an inch or
-so from the water: but, save coral and sand, they saw
-nought besides. Still I felt certain that the treasure lay
-upon the reefs, and we had many disputes as to the possibility
-of the dwarf having managed, by flinging certain
-fragments of rock, which we found upon the eastern
-edge of the shoal, and each of which was the nucleus of
-immense masses of clustering sea-weed, to hide the precious
-deposit from strange eyes. We all agreed that
-little or nothing of the ship could possibly be remaining;
-but, as it was likely that the treasure was shipped in
-strong boxes either of iron, or secured with that metal,
-it was quite possible that these lay in crevices of the
-rocks, their great weight mooring them, and that the dwarf
-employed his leisure time before our arrival in covering
-them with the sea-weed grown stones of which I
-spoke. But all these opinions were but idle wind. We
-knew not the truth. Some of the elder seamen would
-have it that the whole was the work of the devil; that the
-dwarf was a demon who haunted those lonely shelves to
-disturb and perplex poor mariners; and in the evening,
-when we sat upon deck smoking and drinking in the
-grateful twilight, many a dismal tale was rehearsed of
-phantoms of the sea, and particularly of the unearthly
-creatures whom many of the crew believed to dwell upon
-islands as yet unvisited by mariners, and who try to scare
-away the human intruders upon their domains.</p>
-
-<p>However, we at length got heartily tired of our sojourn
-amid the reefs, and the more so as we began to fear that
-we might miss the rich ship from Carthagena. A council
-was therefore held, at which we all agreed that we had
-wasted too much time already, seeking for the dwarf’s<span class="pagenum" id="Page_185">[Pg 185]</span>
-treasure, and that the sooner the ship’s head was turned
-to the southward the better. Accordingly, the next
-sunrise saw the boats hoisted up, our anchor safely
-catted at our bows, and the schooner running gaily upon
-her original course. We had rough weather and heavy
-seas ere we made the Samballas islands, to which we first
-intended to repair, and one stormy night I saw, for the
-first time, the appearance of that strange light which is
-sometimes seen on board ships at sea, and which the
-Spanish and Portuguese seamen know as the ‘corpus,’ or
-‘corpus sant,’ and which our sailors sometimes call
-‘Nell’s Beacon.’ The Spanish word seems to me to be
-clearly a corruption of ‘corpus sanctum’—the holy body—they
-tracing the light, which I believe to be nothing
-else than a mere harmless wandering meteor, to some
-religious or sacred origin. The night that the corpus
-sant appeared on board the Will-o’-the-Wisp was stormy
-and unsettled, the sky being piled with gloomy clouds,
-and the wind strong and gusty. I was sitting by the
-steersman, when, looking aloft, I saw something like a
-greenish-blue glare flickering along the weather end of
-the main cross-trees, just as if some one at a distance
-had been flashing a dark lantern through the rigging. I
-was rubbing my eyes, doubtful whether I had seen
-aright, when all at once the pale glimmer appeared, as it
-were, to become concentrated on one spot at the very
-end of the cross-trees, where it gleamed with a dim yet
-steady light, like a star.</p>
-
-<p>The boatswain had the helm, and I pointed it out to
-him.</p>
-
-<p>‘Nell’s Beacon,’ quoth he; ‘I know it well. When
-it burns high up in the rigging, then it is a good omen,
-and a sign of fair weather; but when it descends upon
-deck and moves to and fro then it is time for all who
-see it to bethink themselves of their sins.’</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile the other men of the watch having also
-observed the light, began to congratulate themselves
-thereupon, only expressing fears that it would descend to
-the deck, for which cause they watched it very anxiously.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_186">[Pg 186]</span>
-Determined, however, to examine the thing minutely, I
-climbed up into the rigging, and although the boatswain
-tried to dissuade me, I got upon the cross-trees, and
-gazed upon the meteor as closely as I would do at the
-flame of a candle. The meteor surrounded the end of
-the spar upon which it appeared, gleaming with a sort of
-pale glow, which was not flame, but rather like the light
-produced by flame, sometimes having a very ghastly
-blue colour, like the blaze of burning spirits, and anon
-turning of a greenish tint. Although the wind blew
-strong, the corpus sant did not waver or flicker like a
-flame, and I passed my hand through and through it,
-without feeling inconvenience. During the time I
-remained aloft, the meteor was becoming more and more
-dim, and soon after I had descended to the deck it disappeared.
-The remainder of the watch we passed discoursing
-upon this phenomenon. Some of the sailors
-said it was a sort of sea glow-worm, and others that it
-was a jelly which shone; but neither of these opinions is
-correct. Upon asking what the Spanish and Portuguese
-sailors said of it, one Thomas Lomax, who had been twice
-a prisoner in a ship of the former nation, told us that
-the tradition of the Spaniards was to this effect:—</p>
-
-<p>A Spanish bark once set sail from Cadiz, bound for
-Sicily. They had very calm weather, and they feared at
-last that their water would run short. All the crew,
-therefore, made vows to St. Antonio, and promised to
-place a silver candlestick upon his shrine if he would
-send them a prosperous breeze. The captain of the ship
-alone refused to join in their prayers, saying that St.
-Antonio could no more send them a wind than a pig
-could see it, and vowing that at all events if it were not
-so, the saint was a shabby fellow not to give poor sailors
-a breeze without their having to rob their wives and
-families to pay him for it. But day after day passed
-by, and the sails still hung in unwinking folds from the
-lateen yards, and the reflection of the ship could be seen
-in the sea as in a mirror. One evening, after a very hot
-day, the air felt even closer than usual, and the captain<span class="pagenum" id="Page_187">[Pg 187]</span>
-told the men that he must reduce still further their
-allowance of water. That night, therefore, they redoubled
-their supplications to the saint, and the captain who, by-the-by,
-was a Frenchman, redoubled his abuse of him,
-swearing that St. Antonio could not muster as much wind
-as would blow out a candle, far less urge on a ship. The
-words had hardly been spoken when a great light shone
-upon the vessel, and, running to the stern, they all saw
-St. Antonio, with a halo round his head, coming walking
-upon the water towards them. At this they all fell upon
-their knees, and even the French captain grew pale, and
-his legs almost failed him. Meantime the saint walked
-upon the sea up to the stern, and placing his hand upon
-the taffrail of the ship, said—</p>
-
-<p>‘This to confound thy unbelief, thou contemner of
-holy men and things!’</p>
-
-<p>At the same giving the ship what appeared to be a
-slight push, but which flung her forward as if she had
-been a stone hurled from a sling. The saint having performed
-this feat, instantly vanished, and at the same
-moment a fearful storm, the like of which was never seen
-by man, suddenly arising, drove on the ship with the
-same rapidity as that which the hand of the saint had
-imparted to her. Meantime all the crew were on their
-knees praying to the Virgin to intercede for them with
-St. Antonio, and expecting nothing less than instant
-death. But the ship continued to drive with unearthly
-rapidity, although without injury, and beginning to take
-courage, they observed, on looking about, a bright light
-burning upon that part of the taffrail which the saint
-had touched with his hand. For three days and three
-nights the miraculous storm lasted. The ship flew
-through the water quicker than birds cleave the air, and
-the supernatural nature of the tempest was made still
-more evident by the fact that it was not general over the
-sea, but that within half a cable’s length from the ship
-the ocean and the air were either perfectly at rest, or a
-pleasant breeze was blowing, and vessels were sailing
-with a fair wind in the opposite direction to that in<span class="pagenum" id="Page_188">[Pg 188]</span>
-which the saint-cursed ship was driven. Still, however,
-the mariners did not cease to importune St. Antonio for
-pardon, and the captain was loudest in his prayers, and most
-lavish in his vows. At length, at midnight on the third
-night, the light, which had never ceased to burn, suddenly
-moved from its place, and flitting to the mast, began to
-ascend it. As the meteor rose into the air, the fury of
-the storm lulled. The mariners, seeing this, fell upon
-their knees and put up loud thanksgivings. The light
-continued to rise until it glittered upon the highest point
-of the rigging, to wit, the end of the great lateen yard,
-where having remained steady for some time, it gave a
-sudden bright flash, and then soared into the air, until
-the gazers could distinguish it no longer amid the stars.
-The wind then fell as suddenly as it had risen, and the
-strained ship again floated tranquilly upon unbroken
-water. When the day dawned, the crew saw land barely
-a league a-head of them, and a fishing-boat coming off
-soon after, they learned that they were off Cape Epiphane
-in the island of Cyprus, having traversed, in an incredibly
-short space of time, almost the whole length of the Mediterranean
-sea. A pleasant breeze, however, soon sprang
-up from the east, and having obtained what water and
-stores they needed, they turned the ship’s head westward,
-and arrived without accident at their port in Sicily,
-where great honours were paid to the shrine of St.
-Antonio. From that time to this, say the mariners of
-Spain, the light which the touch of a holy body—a
-corpus sanctum—created, has never been extinguished,
-but floats over the ocean, appearing now as a warning
-of approaching death, anon as a harbinger of hope to
-mariners.</p>
-
-<p>This was the Spanish tale of the Corpus Sant, and I
-now asked for the English legend of ‘Nell’s Beacon.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Why,’ quoth the boatswain, ‘I never heard it told;
-but often I have heard it sung both afloat and ashore, in
-the taverns at Limehouse or Portsmouth Point, and
-aboard many a ship in many a sea.’ Thereupon, all the
-watch desiring to hear the song, the boatswain, in a very<span class="pagenum" id="Page_189">[Pg 189]</span>
-coarse gruff voice, chanted the following stanzas,
-which, rude as they are, I put down just as I heard
-them:—</p>
-
-
-<p class="center fs120 no-indent">The Legend of ‘Nell’s Beacon.’</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry fs80">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">There are stormy seas do roll,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Which the boldest well may dread,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">When the east wind whistles snell</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">On the cliffs of Beachy Head.</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">By that coast, tempest beaten,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">On the sea-weed clustered stones,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Stout-hearted sailors many,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Have laid their weary bones.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">From the sandy shores of Eastbourne,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Nigh the rocks whereof I sing,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Sailed a brave and lusty seaman,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">And his name was Richard King.</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">He was captain of a trading sloop,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Which voyaged unto the Seine,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">And ’twas Beachy Head he always made</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">When he returned again.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">For there, from eve to dawning,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">A beacon always shone</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">During the time, whate’er it was,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">That Richard King was gone.</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">From the window of a cottage</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">That beam came, ever bright,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">For there sat Nelly, Richard’s wife,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">And trimmed the lamp all night.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">She trimmed it, for she knew</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">That her husband dear would gaze,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">When the white cliffs loomed a-head,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">For those love-enkindled rays;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">And when he saw them flicker,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Through the darkness of the night,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">He would straightways cry right cheerily</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">‘There’s Nelly’s Beacon Light.’</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">But, ah! these long night watches,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">They paled poor Nelly’s cheek;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Her eye was bright and fevered,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">But her step grew slow and weak.</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Her husband bent above her,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">And she looked up in his face—</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">‘I’m wearing fast away,’ quoth she;</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">‘I go unto my place.</div><span class="pagenum" id="Page_190">[Pg 190]</span>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">But you are bound to sea, dear,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">To the stormy Spanish shore;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Look, Richard, look upon your Nell,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">You ne’er may see her more!</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">But watch when you return, dear,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">You will know that I am dead,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">If no light shines out to greet you</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">From the top of Beachy Head.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">‘Yet death shall never part us,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">For, if it lawful be,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">My soul shall fly to you, dear,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Athwart the roaring sea;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">But not a ghastly sheeted corpse</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Shall I appal your sight,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">You will see an airy Beacon,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">And my soul will be the Light.’</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">The storm roared loud at midnight,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">With sleet, and wind, and rain;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">The struggling ship tossed wildly</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">On the rocky coast of Spain:</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">When suddenly the captain cried—</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">‘Oh God, my wife is dead!’</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Upon the topmast gleamed a light—</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">The Light of Beachy Head!</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">
-
-<hr class="chap"></div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">Two score of years went slowly by,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">And again the storm-blast blew,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Old Richard King, with long grey hair,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Spake cheerily to the crew.</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">‘Oh look aloft, my gallant boys,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">There’s hope within our sight,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">A kindly spirit watches us—</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">There’s Nelly’s Beacon Light!’</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">But as he spoke, the Beacon</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Came floating through the air,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">The captain knew the sign—he knelt</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">In thanksgiving and prayer.</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">The tempest swept him from the deck,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">But as he sunk like lead,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Above his forehead shone the light</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Which gleamed from Beachy Head!</div><span class="pagenum" id="Page_191">[Pg 191]</span>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">And still in time of tempest</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Does Nelly’s Beacon burn,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Sometimes it shines aloft to cheer,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Sometimes alow to warn;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">But it reads us all this lesson—</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">True love is never dead,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">The symbol shines on every sea</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">That shone from Beachy Head!</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-
-<hr class="r10">
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XVIII">CHAPTER XVIII.<br><br>
-<span class="fs80">A KNAVE OF THE CREW PLAYING WITH COGGED DICE IS KEEL-HAULED.</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p>Four days after leaving the reefs, we saw land ahead,
-and presently were running in amid the clusters of the
-Samballas Isles. On every side of us, these rich islands
-flung, as it were, their masses of foliage into the sea;
-bushes clothing the rocks where such existed, and at
-other points thick mangrove woods, the stems of the trees
-often covered with oysters, growing far into the water.
-These forests appeared to swarm with birds and beasts.
-We heard the loud screams of thousands of unknown
-fowls resounding from the woods; and often, as we
-skirted the shore, watching places where the trees did
-not grow thick, we descried troops of monkeys going
-chattering along, or herds of peccary and deer, breaking
-through the bushes. Sea-birds also abounded. Great
-clouds of plovers flew, wheeling and circling along the
-shore, and the white sandy beaches and the sea were
-dotted with turtles basking in the sun, or lazily sleeping
-on the top of the smooth water. The Samballas Islands
-are thinly inhabited by scattered tribes of Indians, who
-subsist by hunting and fishing, and are very willing to
-aid as guides or pilots to the English and French privateers
-who put in here; so that the first canoe which we
-saw made directly towards us, and the two Indians who
-guided it came on board very readily, and were treated
-with brandy and wine, much to their satisfaction. From
-them we learned that several privateers had been lately<span class="pagenum" id="Page_192">[Pg 192]</span>
-in these islands, to careen and provision; and that the
-Spaniards from Porto Bello and Carthagena, had sent a
-fleet of armadilloes, as they are called, being small vessels
-of war, which had swept all the channels between the
-islands, and had captured one privateer, a tartan of four
-guns, commanded by Captain Coxon, having surprised
-her in a creek where she was careening. We questioned
-these Indians respecting the galleon which the Spanish
-prisoner at Jamaica had told us of. They know that
-many rich ships sailed annually from Carthagena to Old
-Spain, but could tell no particulars, conjecturing, however,
-that if any vessel with a freight of price were now
-fitting for sea, she would sail after the return of the
-armadilloes to Carthagena, judging that they would have,
-for the present, cleared the coast. This information,
-which jumped with our own ideas, made us very anxious
-to take in what provisions we stood in want of, and be
-off to the westward; and the same afternoon the friendly
-Indians piloted the schooner into a very snug bay, where
-we lay with trees all round us, except at one point where
-an opening in the woods conducted to a noble savannah,
-whither we often went to hunt. While we lay here, all
-hands were fully occupied. Upon the beach, near the
-schooner, we erected a place for preparing boucan, which
-we preferred to regularly salted meat: and of which
-Nicky Hamstring, who had a natural turn for cooking in
-all its branches, was appointed superintendent. Then
-the Mosquito men went daily in their canoe, and struck
-turtle and manatee. Hunting parties, whereof I generally
-made one, explored the woods and brought good store of
-peccary and deer down to the boucan. We shot also the
-tender young monkies, who often made my heart sore by
-their screaming and moaning when they felt the lead,
-and by the pitiful way in which, when they came by a
-broken bone, they would handle the useless limb, and
-grin and weep with the pain. Besides these, we made
-food of the guanas or yellow lizards, who live amid the
-branches, and love to bask in the sun upon the topmost
-boughs, and also of a species of red land-crab, which our<span class="pagenum" id="Page_193">[Pg 193]</span>
-men call soldiers, from their colour, and which run
-nimbly about, generally at the roots of trees, hiding
-themselves quickly in holes, and burrowing like rabbits.
-The Indians who conducted our schooner into the bay,
-lived with others not far off, in smoky huts, which were
-surrounded by patches of cleared land, wherein they grew
-good store of yams and plantains, which they sold very
-willingly for hatchets, saws, and such like implements,
-with powder and lead. Meantime, while a great part of
-the crew were thus busy on shore, Captain Jem, with
-the hands who remained on board the schooner, was occupied
-in changing her appearance as much as possible;
-for we knew that the Spaniards have no lack of spies
-either in Jamaica or the other English islands, and we
-misdoubted that an account of the schooner had been
-sent to Cuba, and from thence to the Main. We, therefore,
-repainted the ship, making a great yellow streak
-from stem to stern, with false ports, and also made a
-shift to alter, to the eye at least, the trim of the ship,
-by placing false bulwarks towards the stern, which
-heightening her from the foremast all the way aft—the
-painted streak being made to correspond with the
-new bulwarks—caused the schooner to have a clumsy
-look, as though she were down by the head, in consequence
-of carrying an ill-stowed cargo. We also
-changed the set of the masts, by putting heavy strains
-upon the rigging; and lastly, we patched the sails,
-although they were new and good, with old canvas; conducting
-our operations with such good effect, that the
-crew swore to a man, that had they been away for a
-week, they would never have recognised the schooner for
-the ‘Will-o’-the-Wisp.’</p>
-
-<p>Being at length in readiness for our cruise, we towed
-the ship out of the little bay, and commenced beating to
-windward through the islands, passing the isle called Las
-Sound, where the Buccaneers have a legend, that the
-heart of Sir Francis Drake lies buried in four caskets, of
-lead, of iron, of silver and of gold. I see no reason,
-however, for believing that his heart was not in his body<span class="pagenum" id="Page_194">[Pg 194]</span>
-when that was committed to the deep in the bay of Porto
-Bello, amid the thunder of artillery, and the crash of the
-martial music, in which the great admiral so much
-delighted. As we worked up against strong westerly
-breezes, we met with several fleets of large canoes, laden
-with sugar, hogs, yams, and corn, running before the
-trades; but as we were now approaching Carthagena, we
-thought it most prudent to let these piraguas pass by
-unmolested, hoisting Spanish colours, and making as
-though we were a friendly trader. So in due time, we
-left the westernmost of the Samballas keys to the leeward,
-and stood off to the north-west, designing to make
-a long stretch out to sea, so as to prevent any intelligence
-of our whereabouts being conveyed along the main
-land to Carthagena.</p>
-
-<p>Towards the afternoon of the day on which we cleared
-the Samballas, I having the charge of the deck, could not
-help noticing the miserable plight of one Simon Radley,
-a young sailor, who was a very quiet well-behaved fellow,
-and a favourite on board. When we left Jamaica, he had
-been very well dressed in seaman fashion; but now, he
-was clothed merely in rags, without a shirt, and his
-shoes were only bits of canvas swathed round his feet,
-and very coarsely sewn together. Besides all this, the
-poor fellow looked almost broken-hearted, and went about
-his work very sadly,</p>
-
-<p>‘Simon Radley,’ quoth I ‘how came you in this plight?
-Have you lost all your clothes? Surely if you have,
-your comrades will lend you some, and you can make it
-up to them with the first of your prize-money.’</p>
-
-<p>Well, at first the fellow would answer never a word.
-At length he muttered that he had been unlucky, very
-unlucky, but that it was nobody’s fault but his own, and
-that he would be better off soon. I insisted, however,
-on knowing what he had done with his clothes, upon
-which, after a great deal of stammering and hesitation,
-he plucked up his heart, and said broadly, that I had no
-business with his clothes, and that, if he chose to wear a
-clout, or paint himself and go half naked like the savages,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_195">[Pg 195]</span>
-it was nothing to me, or to any one else, so long as he did
-his duty manfully. Just as he was speaking, up came the
-boatswain, John Clink.</p>
-
-<p>‘Simon Radley,’ says the old fellow, ‘you speak like a
-fool. It concerns us all, to see our comrades so bestowed
-as that they shall have the best chance of keeping their
-health, and not turning sick upon our hands. Now, I
-know where your clothes are, well. I have had my eye on
-you for some days past. Your clothes are in George
-Bell’s chest, with a good quantity of the clothes of the
-other men as well.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Hush, hush,’ says Radley, ‘there is honour in these
-things. If they are in George Bell’s chest, it is because
-they belong to him.’</p>
-
-<p>‘But how?’ cries I. ‘Have you sold the clothes,
-Simon?’</p>
-
-<p>‘Sold them—no,’ says Clink. ‘He has lost them, or
-been cheated of them, at dice, with that fellow Bell, who
-is a sneaking vagabond, and always skulking out of the
-way, whenever he is wanted.’</p>
-
-<p>I remembered now that I had very often seen Bell
-playing dice with others of the crew, but had taken no
-particular notice, such games being very common among
-privateersmen.</p>
-
-<p>‘And so you have had bad luck, Simon?’ rejoined I.</p>
-
-<p>‘Bad luck,’ interrupted Clink: ‘yes, and most of those
-have bad luck who play with George Bell.’</p>
-
-<p>The conversation continuing, we gradually drew from
-Radley, that he had played with Bell for all the ready
-money which he possessed on leaving Jamaica, and lost
-it; that then he had played for a good set of mathematical
-instruments, and lost them; that then he had played for
-all his clothes, and lost them; and, although for some
-time his shipmates had supplied him, that he had lost in
-succession every article of clothing so given to him, in the
-same way; and that, finally, he had played for and lost
-his chances of prize-money during the whole cruize. All
-this the poor fellow told with great reluctance, seeming
-to consider such disclosures as a breach of honour; but<span class="pagenum" id="Page_196">[Pg 196]</span>
-on John Clink saying that, in his belief, Bell had been a
-common sharper in London, and had bubbled poor Radley
-out of his property, Simon grew very indignant, and
-swore that, if it were so, he would have Bell’s blood.
-However, we pacified him, and made him understand
-that before making any charge, we must have better
-proof. George Bell at this time being below, and in his
-hammock, I called up a number of the crew in succession,
-all of whom said that they had played with Bell, and that
-they had never won anything; that if, now and then, a
-cast of the dice was in their favour, yet that they always
-rose the losers. Some of these men had had their suspicions
-of Bell’s play, but as they had never compared notes,
-they were not aware, until I questioned them, how very
-similar all their cases were. They knew, indeed, that
-Simon Radley had been stripped, but they were loath to
-accuse a shipmate of foul play.</p>
-
-<p>‘Why, then,’ quoth John Clink, ‘that fellow, Bell,
-must own about half the property in the ship, if your
-tales be all true. This must be looked into.’</p>
-
-<p>‘With whose dice do you play?’ says I: and they all
-answered, that generally it was with Bell’s for that several
-men who had brought dice on board had lost them, they
-knew not how, but Bell had several sets. This information
-increased our suspicions very much, and desiring all
-hands to keep the matter to themselves, and by no means
-to give a hint to Bell that he was suspected, I informed
-Captain Jem of the whole affair.</p>
-
-<p>‘The snivelling, cur-hearted miscreant!’ quoth honest
-Captain Jem, his plump red cheeks glowing with indignation.
-‘I never saw anything good in that fellow since he
-came on board. He is a pitiful skulk, and never stirs
-out of his hammock except when he is driven. It was he
-who counselled us to strike to the Spanish frigate, but if
-we find him out in his roguish tricks his back shall so
-smart for it, as shall cause him to think that his spine be
-stuffed full of pepper instead of marrow.’</p>
-
-<p>So it was determined that Bell should be closely
-watched, and the dice which he was so fond of using, examined<span class="pagenum" id="Page_197">[Pg 197]</span>
-at the first convenient opportunity. Nor had we
-long to wait for its occurrence. In a little more than an
-hour, the suspected culprit came on deck, not thinking
-any harm, and going to the cook-house returned with a
-portion of boucanned pork, off which he made a very good
-dinner, with the help of a clasp-knife, and then having
-washed down the meat with several hearty draughts of
-brandy, he accosted my old friend Le Picard, and asked
-him whether he would shake a wrist with him. Now
-Picard had been also below and asleep, when the investigation
-into Mr. Bell’s character had been going on, and
-the men having kept their own counsel, Le Picard had
-no idea of what was in the wind. So presently, they sat
-down and began to play upon the combings, or ledge of
-the hatchway, Bell having produced the dice and dice-boxes.
-I watched the suspected sharper very closely
-when the game was going on, and noted his general sly
-down-cast look, and the small way which he opened his
-eye-lids, always peering about him with suspicious blinking
-eyes. Then, again, I observed his hand, which,
-although dirty and tarry enough, was not the hand of a
-man who had been all his life accustomed to handle ropes
-and marlin-spikes. Meanwhile, quite a circle of spectators
-gathered round the players, a circumstance not
-usual, as the stakes were trifling, but which Le Picard
-took no notice of. Bell, on the other hand, looked often
-about him, and seemed puzzled at the interest which so
-many of the crew took in the matter. However, he said
-nothing, but played on, so far as I could see very fairly,
-and the luck went from one to the other, as is usual in
-the game. At last, Le Picard grew impatient.</p>
-
-<p>‘Come,’ quoth he ‘<em>Allons, mon camerade, jouons plus
-fortément.</em> Let us play for a better stake.’</p>
-
-<p>‘I am agreeable,’ replied the other, softly.</p>
-
-<p>‘<em>C’est bien, alors.</em> Let it be a double doubloon; I have
-not many left.’</p>
-
-<p>The Frenchman pulled out the piece of gold, and placed
-it on the ledge of the hatchway. Bell, after some searching,
-real or pretended, plucked another piece from his<span class="pagenum" id="Page_198">[Pg 198]</span>
-pocket, holding, as I observed, the dice all the while in
-his hand.</p>
-
-<p>Captain Jem, who stood by me, did not fail to observe
-this as well as I, and whispered to me that the fellow by
-this manœuvre might well have changed the ivory. I
-nodded.</p>
-
-<p>‘A thunderstorm, or a single flash?’ says Bell, meaning,
-shall we decide the game by one cast, or in a great many.</p>
-
-<p>‘Oh, one flash; short and sweet!’ quoth the French
-man. Both of them rattled the dice and flung them forth.</p>
-
-<p>‘Trays,’ called out Le Picard.</p>
-
-<p>‘Sixes,’ exclaimed Bell; ‘the money is mine,’ and he
-grasped the gold greedily.</p>
-
-<p>‘I will hold you doubles or quits,’ cried Le Picard, in
-true gambling spirit.</p>
-
-<p>‘Well, if you want your revenge, I suppose I must not
-say no,’ answered the other, in a quiet unobtrusive tone.</p>
-
-<p>The dice were again thrown, and this time the Frenchman
-had quatres, and Bell, as before, sixes. Muttering
-a great oath, poor Picard fished up the stakes from the
-bottom of his pocket, and was handing them to the
-winner, when Captain Jem cried in a loud voice, ‘Stop.’</p>
-
-<p>Both players looked up in surprise.</p>
-
-<p>‘Bell,’ said the captain, sternly, ‘hand me over that
-dice.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Why, captain,’ quoth the other, in a cringing tone,
-getting suddenly very pale, and looking quickly all about
-him; ‘why, captain, there has been no foul play, I hope?
-We are gentlemen adventurers on board this ship.’</p>
-
-<p>And, with that, his hand stole slily towards his pocket,
-as if to deposit there his winnings. Observing this
-motion, however, I grasped his wrist and defeated his
-intention, the dice falling from his fingers. At the same
-time, Captain Jem caught him by the collar of his
-doublet, crying out—</p>
-
-<p>‘Why, thou booby, thine own words condemn thee;
-who spoke of foul play but yourself? I only asked you
-for the dice, and you straightway think you are accused
-of cheating.’</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_199">[Pg 199]</span></p>
-
-<p>At this Bell looked sheepish enough, but presently
-recovering himself, began to bully and curse, swearing
-that he was a gentleman and a man of honour, and requesting
-to know by what right his dice had been taken
-from him.</p>
-
-<p>‘Come here, Simon Radley,’ says Captain Jem, and
-Simon stood forth, shaking his clenched fist at Bell.</p>
-
-<p>‘Have you not lost every farthing you possessed, as
-well as your clothes and your chances for the cruise, to
-this man?’ says the boatswain.</p>
-
-<p>Simon replied that it was so, and was entering into
-particulars, when Bell burst out with a great affectation
-of scorn and indignation—</p>
-
-<p>‘A pretty fellow,’ quoth he, ‘to game with a gentleman,
-and then, when fortune is adverse, to go and prate of
-your losses, and charge your adversary with foul play!
-Go to, man! had I lost, I never would have accused you
-of cheating. But you throw no dice with me again.’</p>
-
-<p>‘No, that you may depend upon,’ answered Radley.</p>
-
-<p>‘Stay,’ cried Captain Jem, ‘we are going but rashly to
-work. Let all the men here who have diced with George
-Bell hold up their hands.’</p>
-
-<p>Thereupon, more than two-thirds of the crew made the
-sign.</p>
-
-<p>‘Good,’ replied the captain; ‘now, let those who
-have lost money, or aught else to him, hold up their
-hands.’</p>
-
-<p>Nearly the same number of hands were immediately
-displayed. Bell grew yellow in the face, and glared
-about him with fierce spite.</p>
-
-<p>‘Good again,’ continued the captain; ‘Mr. Bell, I
-must congratulate you; fortune has been very kind to
-you—very kind indeed. Now, let those who have won
-money or aught else of George Bell, hold up their
-hands.’</p>
-
-<p>Two hands were raised, and their owners being interrogated,
-it appeared that they had gained, one of them, not
-more than a couple of groats, and the other merely a
-small rusty pistol, which had burst the first and only time<span class="pagenum" id="Page_200">[Pg 200]</span>
-he had fired it, and against which he had staked, being
-incited by Bell, a good perspective glass.</p>
-
-<p>‘So, then, gentlemen and comrades,’ pursued Captain
-Jem, ‘the case stands thus: here are a score of you have
-played with this man; and, although each man of that
-score ought to have had as good a chance of winning as
-Bell, yet the fellow has beaten you all, one after another;
-and the only winnings from him have been contemptible
-matters not worthy speaking of.’</p>
-
-<p>The crew here uttered a loud murmur of acquiescence,
-and some of them began to threaten Bell with their fists.
-Still he tried to put a good face on the matter, although
-his tongue faltered as he spoke.</p>
-
-<p>‘You are mistaken, gentlemen,’ he cried, ‘indeed you
-are; I will take my Bible oath that I played fair; nay, if
-you do not believe me, I am willing to give up all my
-winnings, and surely that ought to satisfy everybody.
-But I assure you, comrades, if I were to be hanged this
-minute, I would still say that you had no wrong from me. I
-am incapable of cheating, gentlemen! I do not understand
-how to cog dice, upon my soul; indeed, indeed I do not.’</p>
-
-<p>‘That fellow’s tongue would hang him if there were but
-one rope in the world,’ says the boatswain; ‘he was the
-first to talk of foul play, and now he is the first to talk of
-cogged dice!’</p>
-
-<p>‘We will soon settle that matter,’ says the captain, ‘and
-that by splitting open the ivory.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Oh, certainly, certainly, I agree to that,’ says Bell;
-‘here are my dice, sir,’ and he whipped out several cubes
-from his pocket.</p>
-
-<p>‘No, no,’ interrupted I, ‘never mind these; we will
-try the dice with which you won the two doubloons e’en
-now.’ And one of the men having fetched a hammer, I
-placed the morsel of ivory upon the ledge of the hatchway.
-Upon seeing this, Bell went down plump upon his
-knees, and raised a dismal howl.</p>
-
-<p>‘Ah, you can be penitent enough now, chicken-heart!’
-says Captain Jem; whilst I, having splintered the dice
-with a blow, we discovered a small bent piece of lead, very<span class="pagenum" id="Page_201">[Pg 201]</span>
-neatly inserted in one of the specks of the deuce side of
-the cube, not, however, drilled perpendicularly into the
-ivory, but artificially deposited in a sort of burrowing
-hole, running along just under the surface of that side of
-the square. It was evident, that to prepare a dice in this
-fashion required a hand very skilful and well accustomed
-to the work. The men crowded round to see it, uttering
-furious menaces against the convicted sharper, who never
-moved from his knees, but continued to supplicate most
-piteously for mercy.</p>
-
-<p>‘Mercy!’ exclaimed Captain Jem; ‘mercy, forsooth.
-Thou art one of the first privateersmen I ever heard of
-cheating his comrades, and thou shalt smart for it, or I
-no longer command this schooner.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Do not flog me—for mercy’s sake, do not flog me!’
-the fellow bawled; ‘I cannot bear flogging—it will kill
-me—it will be murder if you flog me. I was flogged
-once, and the doctor said it all but killed me;’ and so,
-crying and howling, the pitiful creature cast him down
-upon the deck, and bemoaned himself in the most abject
-misery of spirit.</p>
-
-<p>‘Flogged before,’ said the boatswain. ‘Ay, I warrant
-thee. Aboard what ship?’</p>
-
-<p>‘Aboard no ship at all,’ roared the culprit. ‘On shore.
-Oh dear!—oh, dear!’</p>
-
-<p>‘On shore,’ answered the boatswain. ‘At the cart’s
-tail I presume?’</p>
-
-<p>‘Yes, yes,’ cried Bell; ‘but I give you my word of
-honour, sir—my sacred word of honour, that I was not
-guilty then. It was another man.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Not guilty then,’ says Nicky Hamstring. ‘No; no
-more than you are now, I dare affirm.’</p>
-
-<p>The miserable devil gave no answer, but made as
-though he would catch the legs of the men about him,
-and cling to them. In all my life I never saw such a
-pitiful hound.</p>
-
-<p>‘Keel-haul the fellow,’ says one of the men, ‘and see
-whether the brine won’t wash the roguery out of him.’
-And the others joined in the cry: ‘Yes, yes, keel-haul him.’</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_202">[Pg 202]</span></p>
-
-<p>At this the culprit sat up upon the deck and looked
-earnestly in the faces of the men through his tears. I do
-not think he understood what keel-hauling meant.</p>
-
-<p>‘Anything,’ says he, whining like a hungry cat; ‘anything
-sooner than flogging.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Very good,’ says Captain Jem. ‘Be it so. Truly, on
-second thoughts, it would be degrading hemp to put it to
-any other use about such a scoundrel, except hanging him.’</p>
-
-<p>Meantime, half a dozen of the men, in great glee at
-the anticipated ducking, went about the preparations
-without loss of time.</p>
-
-<p>The punishment of keel-hauling, I premise, that we
-borrowed from the Dutch. Its name describes its nature.
-The prisoner is fastened to a rope led under the vessel’s
-keel, and hauled beneath her bottom, as often as his guilt
-seems to require. It is evident that this is a punishment
-the severity of which depends greatly upon the size of
-the ship, and the frequency with which the process is
-repeated. To be hauled under the keel of a great ship of
-war is a very different thing from being hauled under the
-keel of a small sloop; but in order to give the punishment
-its requisite severity on board small craft, the culprit
-is often hauled all along the keel, being let over the
-bows, and taken up at the stern; a process by which he
-is sure to be at least half drowned and half scraped to
-death by the rough barnacles and jagged shell fish
-which generally encase a ship’s bottom. In the present
-case it was determined, however, that Bell should undergo
-the easier mode of punishment, and be hauled from bulwark
-to bulwark, but the dose was to be administered
-twice, giving him a breathing-time between. Accordingly,
-by the help of a sounding lead, first a thin line and afterwards
-a stout cord were conducted under the ship’s keel,
-Mr. Bell watching the process with great anxiety.</p>
-
-<p>‘What—what are you going to do with me?’ at length
-he cried, beginning to comprehend the nature of his
-punishment. ‘You do not mean to drag me under the ship?’</p>
-
-<p>‘You have hit it my hearty,’ says the boatswain; ‘hit
-it to a tee. Yes; we will give you an opportunity of inspecting<span class="pagenum" id="Page_203">[Pg 203]</span>
-the run of the schooner, and if you fail to observe
-all its beauties the first time, don’t break your heart, you
-will have another chance immediately after.’</p>
-
-<p>At this the cowardly animal began to howl and blubber
-again.</p>
-
-<p>‘You will drown me, you will; it’s murder. There
-were sharks about the ship all yesterday. I will never
-come up alive! Have mercy on me! I have a wife and
-family in England. I would rather be flogged than put
-overboard. I would rather be flogged, indeed I would.’</p>
-
-<p>At this moment Captain Jem came up.</p>
-
-<p>‘Rather be flogged, would he? A minute ago he sang
-another tune. Why, you discontented thief,’ roared the
-captain, ‘you would not be pleased even although we were
-to hang you. Come, men, bear a hand, and have him
-overboard in a trice.’</p>
-
-<p>Immediately, half a dozen stout fellows flung themselves
-upon the miserable culprit. He roared, swore, and
-prayed, all in a breath, kicked out with his legs and arms,
-and sought to bite and scratch like a wild cat. But he
-was speedily mastered, his arms pinioned securely, his
-ankles tied together, and the rope which ran under the
-keel made fast under his armpits. He was then lifted
-and carried to the larboard bulwarks, half a dozen men
-holding the end of the rope, which passed beneath the
-keel and came up on the starboard side, while two or
-three hands had charge of the continuation of the line, so
-as to steady his descent in the first dive, and to pull him
-back by in the second.</p>
-
-<p>All this time the vagabond never ceased to abuse and
-swear at us, seeing that cries for mercy availed not.
-Captain Jem gave the word—</p>
-
-<p>‘Heave and pull,’ and instantly Mr. Bell went with a
-splash into the sea, struggling for a moment on the surface,
-and then, as the men on the starboard side hauled the
-rope, disappearing in the water.</p>
-
-<p>‘Rattle him round,’ says the captain. ‘He must not
-drown for all he is such a villain.’ The men ran across
-the deck with the rope; there was a surge and a jerk,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_204">[Pg 204]</span>
-when the poor devil struck the projecting keel, but he was
-instantly dragged beneath it, and the next moment he
-made his appearance on the larboard side, struggling,
-panting and coughing up the water, his face all blue and
-bleeding from having been scraped along the bottom, and
-his clothes torn by the jagged shells of the barnacles.</p>
-
-<p>‘O, Lord!’ he gasped; ‘murder—it is—murder;’ and
-then the coughing well-nigh choked him.</p>
-
-<p>‘Down with him again,’ cried the captain. The end of
-the rope which had been before used as a guy was
-promptly manned, and Bell again disappeared beneath
-the water, was again rudely jerked against the keel, and
-then hauled up the side of the ship, and cast upon deck
-all bleeding and insensible, with his hands blue and
-cramped, and his limbs quite limp and motionless. By
-Captain Jem’s direction he was held up by the legs, when
-presently he vomited up a great quantity of sea water,
-and then began to stir and moan, with great fits of coughing.
-His hands and legs were then released, and he
-managed to sit up on deck, leaning against the mast, and
-looking as if he had just wakened out of a dream.</p>
-
-<p>‘Let this be a warning to you, Mr. Bell,’ said the captain,
-‘how you play dice in future. I presume you will
-only stay in this ship until you have a chance of going on
-board another. None of your own property, however
-you came by it, will be taken away, but all that you
-cheated your comrades of must be restored.’</p>
-
-<p>Accordingly, Bell’s chests were opened, a general distribution
-took place, and that evening Simon Radley
-appeared in his former attire. As for the sharper himself,
-we afterwards learned that he had been a well-known
-rogue in London, and after having been twice flogged at
-the cart’s tail, had been tried for ring-dropping, and transported
-to the plantations of Virginia, from which he
-managed to escape, and after divers adventures in the
-West Indies—whereof the greater part were more complimentary
-to his ingenuity than to his honesty—he had
-shipped on board our schooner at Jamaica, as the reader
-has seen.</p>
-<hr class="r10">
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_205">[Pg 205]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XIX">CHAPTER XIX.<br><br>
-<span class="fs80">WE CRUISE OFF CARTHAGENA AWAITING THE GALLEON, AND I<br>
-FALL INTO THE HANDS OF THE SPANIARDS</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p>In three days after leaving the Samballas Islands, we
-had beat so far to the norwest, that we counted upon
-being rather to windward of Carthagena, and from nine
-to twelve leagues distance from the coast. The west
-winds blow here with very little intermission, the land-breeze
-being very slight when it does come, which is but
-seldom. It was necessary now to determine exactly
-upon our mode of proceeding, and this was the plan we
-adopted. The prize which we expected was a private
-Patache, or treasure-ship, which, not waiting the convoy
-of the great fleet which sails once in every three years
-from the West Indies for Spain, intended, as we were
-informed by Mr. Pratt’s prisoner, to risk the chances of
-the homeward passage unprotected. Now, it was clear,
-that the first thing which we had to do, was to ascertain
-whether the Patache, or galleon, was still in Carthagena,
-and if so, when she would probably come out. Our next
-care would be to keep to sea, and watch the coast and
-the harbour, so as, if possible, to prevent the galleon
-putting off unknown to us; while, at the same time, we
-managed so as to prevent any alarm being excited upon
-the coast. With this view, we would, of course, run in
-tolerably close with the land at nights, keeping further
-in the offing during the day, and showing as little sail as
-possible. But our first business, as I have said, was
-clearly to ascertain that the mouse was actually in the
-hole; and that we might be sure, we determined to venture
-well in towards the harbour that very night, and, if
-possible, capture some small coasting craft or fisherman,
-who could give us the information which we required.
-Accordingly, we turned the schooner’s head to the southward,
-and ran along with a pleasant breeze abeam. By
-sunset we saw the land; and so correct was our reckoning,
-and so skilful our pilots, that John Clink and Captain
-Jem, who knew the coast well, pronounced the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_206">[Pg 206]</span>
-hummock, on which we were gazing, to be a high hill
-just behind the city of Carthagena, on which there stands
-a cathedral, which boasts of a very rich shrine, dedicated
-to the Holy Virgin, and of which more hereafter.
-Carthagena itself is principally built upon a small sandy
-island in a bay. The city lies upon the seaward side of
-the island, which is connected, by a long wooden bridge,
-with the suburbs or faubourgs along the main coast, the
-strait being, as may be supposed, a mere belt of shallow
-water. Well, by ten o’clock, we saw the lights of
-Carthagena quite plainly ahead of us; and afraid of venturing
-too near, we hove to, and kept a good look out
-around us. But the sea was as shipless, as though it
-heaved round a desolate island. The breeze was light
-and fitful, and we lay tossing on the long swell, our bows
-plunging deeply, and our gaffs and sails creaking and
-surging in perfect solitude. One by one the lights on
-shore disappeared, as the citizens went to bed, quite unwitting
-who was watching the gleam from their casements;
-and, presently, the dusky line of the shore was
-unbroken even by the twinkling of a single lantern. All
-at once, however, we saw a bright glow begin to shine
-forth from the top of the hill which I have mentioned.
-At first, we thought it a fire breaking out in a large and
-lofty house; but, presently, I discerned that it was the
-cathedral of <em>Nuestra a Senora de Papa</em>, lighted up for
-some night service. It was very brave to trace the outline
-of the great arched windows, all shining, as it were,
-with different-coloured fire, by reason of the stained glass,
-covered with the figures of martyrs, and angels, and
-saints; but when I was intently gazing at this glorious
-sight, John Clink, the boatswain, suggested that we
-might well run in closer. ‘For,’ quoth he, ‘all the
-people of the town will be at their devotions, this place
-being the very Loretto of the West Indies.’ The boatswain’s
-advice was followed, and we edged in with the
-land, until we could hear the sound of the surf very
-distinctly, and made out furthermore—the stars shining
-out somewhat—that there were several large ships and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_207">[Pg 207]</span>
-many smaller craft in the bay. Not daring to approach
-these too closely in the schooner, the shallop was got
-out with little noise, and I was appointed to go in her to
-reconnoitre. I made the men muffle their oars with
-canvas, and we agreed that the schooner should show two
-lights, one above the other, for a space of thirty seconds,
-every ten minutes, until we returned. I also took a
-dark-lantern in the boat, and we pulled silently away
-from the schooner towards the land. Presently the
-white glimmer of the surf could be seen plainly, close
-ahead of us; and so we pulled leisurely along the outer
-edge, making for that part of the bay where the shipping
-lie, somewhat to the westward of the town. We paused
-on our oars now and then, and listened very attentively
-for sounds of alarm. But none came. There was a holy
-calm abroad upon the night, and the stars shone down
-through the stirless air. The coast seemed like a dark
-cloud lying on the water, except where, at its highest
-ridge, the festival tapers gleamed from out the great
-cathedral. We sat as men spell-bound, gazing on the
-beauty of it. Presently, it appeared as though great
-folding doors had been flung open, a burst of light, like a
-glory, streamed forth from what was a vision of pillars
-and arches, and great gleaming aisles; and falling on the
-broad steps leading to the portals, streamed over a dusky
-crowd of worshippers, men and women, kneeling with
-almost prostrate forms upon the marble ledges; and at
-the same instant, the mighty swell of a great organ, and
-the deep peal of a thousand mingled voices, rose solemnly
-up, overflowing, as it were, the very atmosphere, and
-mingling with the dim surf-music, as though both sea and
-land would join their tones in that great harmony. So,
-rude sailors as we were, we could not but listen, and in
-our hearts, adore. It was a Latin chant the people sung.
-Sometimes it fell so low, that we could hear but a faint
-and distant hum. Anon it rose, and pealed, and rung so
-gloriously out, that I could discern the very syllables
-of that mighty chorus, of ‘Jubilate, Jubilate, Jubilate.
-Amen.’</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_208">[Pg 208]</span></p>
-
-<p>At length the organ ceased, and there was silence.</p>
-
-<p>‘Very well sung,’ said Simon Radley, who pulled the
-stroke-oar, ‘and a very good psalm.’</p>
-
-<p>Our solemn moods seldom lasted long. Howbeit, I
-was sunk in musing. The grave and solemn season of a
-tranquil night invokes like thoughts. I looked at our
-muffled oars, and thought how, darkling, we skulked
-upon the water, watching for our prey; and, as I mused,
-I could not help hearing, as it were, in my ears, the echo
-of a hollow sing-song voice, the utterance of that good
-man, but somewhat wearisome preacher, the Rev.
-Michael Wylieson, of Kirk Leslie, in Fife, who loved to
-take for his text the verse which speaks of a certain
-coming, as like unto the coming of a thief in the night.
-But all this lasted only for a minute; I started up,
-crying—</p>
-
-<p>‘Pull, my men, pull—we’ve come to seek a rich
-galleon, and not to list the droning of chests full of
-whistles.’</p>
-
-<p>And so we stole cautiously on, until there rose, cutting
-the starry skies ahead of us, the tall masts of several
-ships of price. Which of these was the patache? We
-gazed and whispered, and while we whispered, there
-suddenly rose, as it seemed from the water, not a score
-fathoms ahead of us, a loud voice singing, in the Spanish
-language, and presently we discovered a small dark object,
-like a canoe, very low in the water, with the form of one
-man on board. As we gazed, the figure moved and turned;
-then appearing to observe the boat, the man stopped
-in his song, and bursting into a laugh, so that one could
-discern he was a negro, called out to us in bad
-Spanish,—</p>
-
-<p>‘You may as good go home to your hammocks, the
-pisareros (that is a kind of fish) will not bite till the tide
-turn, or the moon rises.’</p>
-
-<p>‘All is well, he suspects nothing,’ I whispered; ‘let us
-make sure of him.’ And so, as my comrades bent to
-their oars, I replied with a sort of imitation of the song
-which the fisherman, for such he was, had been singing,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_209">[Pg 209]</span>
-and at which he laughed again in his peculiar manner.
-But his mirth did not last long. Just as the shallop
-came with somewhat of a rude surge against the canoe, a
-couple of muscular hands grasped the poor negro by neck
-and arm, while I said in Spanish,—</p>
-
-<p>‘Not a cry—not a sound—if you value your life.’</p>
-
-<p>Immediately the poor man was pulled—all trembling
-and gasping in his bewilderment—into our boat, where
-he sat in the bottom, his white teeth chattering, and his
-eyes gleaming and rolling, while he sputtered out broken
-prayers in mingled Spanish and Latin.</p>
-
-<p>‘Now,’ said I, still speaking the former language,
-‘answer truly what is asked of you, and you shall come
-to no harm; but if you try to deal falsely by us, your
-blood be on your own head.’</p>
-
-<p>At this the poor fellow gasped out, that he would do
-anything, if we would spare his life. I then questioned
-him concerning the galleon, or treasure-ship, and he
-answered very readily that she was in the harbour, being
-one of the vessels before us; that her freight was well
-nigh aboard, and that she would sail in two days at
-farthest. This was good news, and we hugged ourselves
-on our luck.</p>
-
-<p>‘Then they are not afraid of French or English adventurers
-in these seas?’ I said.</p>
-
-<p>‘Surely not,’ answered the negro. ‘For a fleet of
-armadilloes hath swept, as they think, the pirates clear
-away. So they conclude to set out on the voyage to Old
-Spain without more ado.’</p>
-
-<p>Having said this much, the negro appeared to bethink
-himself—and bursting into great lamentations—besought
-us never to reveal that we had heard aught from him;
-‘otherwise,’ quoth he, ‘there is no death so cruel my
-master would not put me to.’</p>
-
-<p>But we bade him to be of good cheer, seeing that now
-his masters were altogether changed, and he was in the
-service of brave privateersmen, instead of skulking
-Spaniards; but that, indeed, if he proved a gallant trustworthy
-fellow, and would give us all the information he<span class="pagenum" id="Page_210">[Pg 210]</span>
-could, he was no man’s slave but his own master.
-On this he plucked up a little, and said that if it would
-be a satisfaction to us, we could row close up to the
-galleon, and view her, as the Spaniards, being in
-fancied security, kept but slack watch; and, indeed, the
-greater part of the crew had gone to the cathedral on the
-hill, to a great High Mass. This was just what we
-wanted, but first there was a small job to be done.
-Whispering to Radley, we grasped the gunwale of the
-canoe, and by a vigorous push, surged the light shell-like
-thing fairly bottom upwards.</p>
-
-<p>The negro looked on in consternation. ‘Why do you
-do that?’ he said, at length.</p>
-
-<p>‘Look you, Pedro,’ for such was his name: ‘Look
-you, Pedro,’ says I, ‘suppose both you and your boat
-disappear—what will your master think to-morrow morning?
-a cockle-shell made of bark like that will not sink,
-therefore you could not have foundered. A hurricane
-has not carried you out to sea, because neither has there
-been, nor is there likely to be, any hurricane—ergo, both
-boat and man have been somehow spirited away. Such
-being the case, there must be enemies—pirates you call
-them—on the coast; and there being pirates on the
-coast, it would be mighty rash for the good galleon to
-sail. But then, Pedro, when your worthy master sees
-the canoe bottom-upward, tumbled by the surf upon the
-beach, the case will be different. An accident has happened,’
-he will say, “My poor Pedro, so faithful a slave,
-and so profitable a fisherman, hath somehow, in his zeal
-to catch pisareros, doubtless, overbalanced himself, and
-capsized this light canoe. Woe is me, Pedro sleeps
-among sea-weed.” But Pedro sleeping among sea-weed
-will not prevent the anchors of the galleon from being
-lifted to her bows—you see.’</p>
-
-<p>At this the poor fellow, understanding the device,
-looked up pitifully in my face—</p>
-
-<p>‘I have a wife,’ quoth he, ‘and she will also think——’
-Here his voice failed him, and the honest creature began
-to whimper.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_211">[Pg 211]</span></p>
-
-<p>‘Come—come,’ I broke in: ‘you may go back to your
-wife, Quashy, if you like, after we have the galleon, but
-till then you are one of us.’ I think the negro had sense
-to see, that whining would not make his case any the
-better, for he dried up his eyes, and pointing ahead, told
-us, that the ship riding nearest the shore was the galleon.</p>
-
-<p>Slowly and cautiously we rowed, describing a great
-circle round to seaward, so as to keep out of the way of
-the outermost ships. Their lights fell in long rays across
-the water, and we could hear the voices of the men
-aboard as they talked. Once we were hailed, and I
-ordered Pedro to reply—saying we were fishermen returning
-from catching pisareros, to have them ready for
-the early market—but no one offered to interrupt us,
-until the shallop floated in the shadow of the great carved
-quarter galleries of the galleon. The ship appeared well
-nigh deserted. The lap of the water against her sides,
-and the cheep of the rudder, as it moved a little way to
-and fro in the calm, were all the sounds about her. Had
-there been but a slight puff of wind from the shore we
-might have cut her cable, boarded her, and fairly carried
-her away; but in a calm such an enterprise was out of
-the question. So, we were preparing to push off, well
-satisfied with our reconnoitring, when a light suddenly
-fell upon the carved figure of a saint, which formed one
-of the stern ornaments, and at the same time I could
-hear, though faintly, men’s voices in conversation. It
-would appear that some one had entered the great cabin
-with a light, and one of the windows being open, advertised
-us of the circumstance. All at once it occurred to
-me that, if I heard somewhat of the conversation, it was
-just possible that I might pick up some information as to
-the exact time the ship would sail, and the exact track
-she would follow; or perhaps the vision of a rope left
-carelessly dangling from the quarter into the water, had
-something to do with the notion. Catching the cord, I
-found it firmly attached above, and so, communicating in
-a whisper to the crew of the shallop my intention, I<span class="pagenum" id="Page_212">[Pg 212]</span>
-swung myself up, and presently gained footing amid the
-great masses of carved work, being wreaths and coronals
-of flowers, and graven figures and symbols of war and
-peace, with which the Spaniards overload the sterns of
-their ships, going to great cost for little utility; and then
-a slight further exertion brought me into a gallery running
-round the great cabin, and fenced in with a sort of
-massive and curiously wrought and fretted railing. Then,
-crouching down, I crept to the window from whence
-came the voices and the light. There was a carved saint
-very handy, close by the casement, and favoured by his
-wooden holiness, I looked securely into the cabin. It
-was very brave in its devices and ornaments, and spacious
-in size. The ceiling was gilded until it glittered again
-in the light of the great silver lamp which swung above
-the table, and draperies and hangings of silk, all embroidered
-and passamented with gold lace, depended both
-from starboard and larboard, showing strangely beside
-the great ponderous breeches, and the strong tackle of
-two cannons, which you might see peeping from amid
-the silken bravery. The mizen-mast passed through this
-great cabin, and it was incrusted as it were with small
-weapons—pistols and daggers, most richly mounted and
-hilted—while below was a great buffet, all set out with
-glimmering crystal and plate—flagons and vases of burnished
-silver, and curiously-shaped goblets of sparkling
-glass. But, although I had never seen such splendour
-on board ship, or indeed, for that matter, anywhere else,
-I gazed with the greatest interest on the two men who
-occupied this floating palace; they sat on either side of
-the table, with a great crystal bottle, almost full of wine,
-and two long-stemmed glasses, before them. One was
-rather old and fat, with dark garments and grey grizzled
-hair. He had little pig-like eyes, and a sly greasy-looking
-face, and was altogether not pleasant to look on. But his
-companion was a handsome gaillard, as you might see in
-a summer’s day, and most bravely dressed. He had a
-very bronzed face, with jet-black moustaches, which were
-curled, and oiled, and crisped; and hair flowing about<span class="pagenum" id="Page_213">[Pg 213]</span>
-his shoulders in such dainty fashion as I warrant you
-cost the barber many an hour’s labour; his eye was
-bright and flashing; his nose and mouth well cut; and,
-altogether, his head would have been a fortune for a
-painter to copy, only there was a leer about the eye, and
-a curl about the lip, which gave the lie to whoso would
-say, ‘Here be a gentle cavalier.’ Round his neck he
-wore great masses of lace, among which precious stones
-glittered; his cloak was of the richest velvet; and the
-arm which he stretched out to hold the drinking glass,
-showed a hand daintily gloved and sparkling with rings.
-On the table before him lay a rapier, sheathed and ornamented
-with ribbons, and beside it was a great straw
-hat, or sombrero, looped up with floss of gold and
-silk.</p>
-
-<p>‘I would I were to see Madrid as soon as you,’ said
-the young cavalier; ‘there is a balcony I would fain be
-under but now with a mandoline,’ and, so saying, he set
-himself to hum, making as though he were playing an
-instrument.</p>
-
-<p>‘Truly, Don José,’ answered the other, with a grating
-voice, ‘there are balconies enough in Carthagena, rivals
-enough to be fought with, and husbands enough to be
-deceived.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Pshaw,’ said Don José, ‘colonial conquests give a
-man as little credit as trouble. I warrant you, you would
-have me—as successful a gallant as any at the court, be
-the second who he may,’ and here my gentleman curled
-his moustaches, and leant back with an air of mighty
-complacency,—‘you would have me waste time and incense
-on the female savages of this pestilent corner of the
-world.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Well,’ answered the old man, ‘you ought to have
-bridled your valour, and not have drawn upon a gentleman
-in waiting in the precincts of the Escurial. You
-have no one to blame for your banishment but yourself.
-Zounds, for one, court-bred as you are, and a most learned
-doctor in that grave science of etiquette which rules the
-king who rules the double empire of Old and New<span class="pagenum" id="Page_214">[Pg 214]</span>
-Spain,—you showed yourself a singular pattern of discretion.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Who could help it, most grave and tricksy Senor
-Davosa?’ said the other; ‘what blood of Old Castile
-would not have boiled over to hear an upstart, who knows
-not the name of his grandfather, dispute precedence with
-me—an Hidalgo of fifteen pure and unblemished descents?
-By my faith—if I had any—were the guards not all the
-quicker, the mushroom would speedily have been cropped
-from the earth, and that, by this very piece of steel,’ and
-the speaker touched his rapier.</p>
-
-<p>‘Well,’ answered the other, ‘I hope such are not
-the terms of the memorial I am to carry home for
-you; if they be, I am likely to have but a bootless
-errand.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Fear nothing, man; fear nothing,’ cried Don José;
-‘I know what belongs to a memorial—I know how to
-tickle the ears of a king. The parchment but sets forth
-in words that would move the mainmast of this floating-box,
-which you merchants and seafaring people call ship,
-my frenzied groupings and stumblings in this outer
-darkness, where no sun of royalty shines to cheer or
-warm my forlorn spirit. There are excellent phrases,
-man, excellent phrases in the thing; until I invented
-them I never thought I had been so ill used. When I
-read my own composition it affected me to tears—to tears,
-Davosa—as I hope it will the king. And now, when
-do you sail? Be speedy, my good dove, be speedy, and
-bring me back an olive branch as a sign that the waters
-are abated.’</p>
-
-<p>‘We count to weigh anchor to-morrow evening,’ replied
-the old merchant. ‘The freight was long of coming,
-the mules here being but slow-footed, otherwise we should
-scarce have tarried so long. Every day brings more and
-more risk of these accursed pirates, French and English,
-who so often mar our best ventures.’</p>
-
-<p>‘What! fearful, after the last pair of candlesticks you
-have bestowed on yonder lady, in her house upon the
-hill?’</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_215">[Pg 215]</span></p>
-
-<p>‘Blaspheme not holy things,’ interposed the older
-man.</p>
-
-<p>‘Oh, I cry thee pardon, good Gull,’ replied the other;
-‘I forgot me you had as big a swallow as the rest. Ah,
-yes, to be sure, Our Lady of the Hill! Verily, a valorous
-and a venturesome dame. It was a brave device of
-señors the canons, that last miracle; a most surpassing
-feat, truly. Here is a blessed image of the blessed
-Virgin, dressed out as never was doll before; petticoats
-of cloth of gold, I warrant me, and stiff, absolutely stiff,
-with diamonds, pearls, rubies, and what not. Well! here
-comes an English man-of-war into these seas—the “Oxford,”
-I think, they call her. Bah! how these barbarous
-names stick in a gentleman’s throat; and so, by misadventure,
-this man-of-war, this heretical “Ox—Ox—Oxford,”
-taking fire, no doubt by reason of sparks from—from
-purgatory, to say the very least of it—this man-of-war
-blowing up, what say señors the canons? Down
-rush they from the shrine, all through the city, clamouring,
-“A miracle! A miracle!” Straightway the most
-greasy and gullible mob throng to the sanctuary—and
-what see they there? The Virgin, the doll, that is, in
-its place behind the altar, but all bemudded, all bedraggled,
-her gay clothes drenched with salt water, the
-gold embroidery torn away in flakes, the diamonds, and
-pearls, and rubies, all dropped and gone from stomacher
-and skirt; in fact, a very mutilated memorial of her yesterday’s
-glory. Great ejaculations of surprise and consternation!
-Mighty invocations to every saint in and out
-of the calendar! Evidently, a most dread secret, a most
-mighty mystery—a matter of holy wonder to the faithful!’</p>
-
-<p>‘Don José! Don José!’ interrupted the old man, who
-had listened very impatiently to this tirade; ‘the tongue
-is an unruly member. Take heed what you utter.
-The holy office hath ears which hear afar, and hands
-which smite afar. Who knows who may be even now
-listening to you? For my part I would not breathe to
-myself what you have spoken aloud, even were I alone
-in a boat fivescore miles from land.’</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_216">[Pg 216]</span></p>
-
-<p>‘Good Señor Davosa, it is no more your vocation to
-be fearless, than it is mine to be cowardly,’ replied the
-brisk gallant. ‘The cobwebs of the holy office were
-spun to catch blue bottles, man, not hornets. But I must
-tell you the story out. It is true, man, true, every word
-of it, as the bills of lading you send with this galleon.
-The people, then, wondered and worshipped, but could
-make nothing of the matter. Not so the canons. By the
-soul of the Cid, but they are dexterous fellows, the holy
-canons, and they caught the clue to the secret in brief time.’
-“See you, my brethren,” said the head of the black cassocked
-brigands, “see you here. An heretical, a very
-heretical and damnable ship, called the ‘Oxford,’ hath
-been clean destroyed by fire, kindled no one knows how.
-Immediately after, coming to say our early prayers, what
-find we? This sacred effigy bedraggled and besmirched,
-as you see. How came this so? My brethren, the
-thing shall be clear unto you. The burning of the ‘Oxford’
-is a very apparent and notable miracle. It was
-Our Lady’s hand held the torch. In the darkness of
-the night, when no eye saw it, she left her shrine.
-Many a league hath she walked over land and sea; as,
-indeed, the state of her garments may well make clear
-unto you all. Doubtless she hath scaled great mountains,
-and crested great waves, going with speed, so as
-to return by daylight to this her temple. The proof is
-very clear. The ‘Oxford’ hath perished; Our Lady
-hath spoiled her clothes; therefore hath Our Lady clean
-destroyed the ‘Oxford.’” And so, “Ave Maria Purissima,”
-shout the crowd, grovelling in their credulity.
-But the best—the very cream of the joke is behind—good
-Davosa, as thou shalt hear. “Good brethren and
-faithful,” quoth the chief canon again, “it seemeth clear
-unto me, that after such a miracle wrought in our favour,
-the least we can do—I mean you can do—is to restore
-the gold, and the diamonds, and the pearls, and the
-rubies, thus spoiled and lost by our good Lady. And
-look ye, it may well be that you shall thus be clear
-gainers; for if our Lady had not destroyed the ‘Oxford,’<span class="pagenum" id="Page_217">[Pg 217]</span>
-mayhap the ‘Oxford’ would have destroyed
-Carthagena, and thus would you have been all clean
-ruined and undone.” So, “Gloria in Excelsis,” again
-shouted the poor fleeced mob; and the image is to have
-new jewels, and the canons to have the old ones, as well
-they deserved them for their ingenuity.’</p>
-
-<p>And so saying, Don José drank off a full glass of
-wine, and leaned back, laughing lustily. His comrade
-arose—</p>
-
-<p>‘That I have listened thus long to you, Don José,’ he
-said, ‘you owe to personal courtesy, not to any sympathy
-with your heathenish spirit, so full of unbelief and
-mockery. Have you any further commands?’</p>
-
-<p>‘No: none—none,’ answered the cavalier, still laughing.
-‘But thou knowest, Davosa, that in your heart,
-man—at the bottom of that cold deep well you call a
-heart—you are laughing with me in very cordial merriment.’</p>
-
-<p>The old man rose up. ‘If you have no further commands,’
-he was beginning, when Don José, who had got
-upon his feet, and was assuming his rapier and sombrero,
-while he repeated—‘No—none at all,’ suddenly stopped,
-and said, laughingly—</p>
-
-<p>‘Hold—yes, one. You have heard of Don Octavio y
-St. Jago—every duenna in Madrid knows him to her
-cost. Well, he and I are close friends; I have writ to
-him. The letter is in the packet you hold; but one
-material circumstance I have forgotten. It is an old
-paction between us, that each should inform the other
-of all his love passages, so that, as it were, we should
-mutually act as spurs to each other’s gallantry, and so
-keep up our reputation.’</p>
-
-<p>The merchant at this shrugged up his shoulders.
-‘But,’ quoth he, ‘I thought you deemed the ladies on
-this side the great ocean no better than savages.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Well, well, my good Davosa, and, if I did, know you
-not that there may be, for once in a way, a certain
-savour and tastiness about savagedom which speaks to
-the palate? Look you, the man palled with nectarines<span class="pagenum" id="Page_218">[Pg 218]</span>
-and peaches may well pluck a bramble as he loiters in
-the field. And so, pray find means to inform my friend
-that there dwelleth in Carthagena a very ripe, and not
-altogether untempting bramble, having the shape of a
-very innocent-hearted and simple-souled damsel, who
-having rejected one or more of my courtesies, put me in
-the mind to tame and humble her completely; that unto
-this end I have gained over her mother, who is a widow
-and also a fool, believing very firmly in the saints, and
-a great number of other phenomena, myself among
-the number; and that—that—in fact I shall impart
-to him the conclusion of the tale when we meet at
-Madrid.’</p>
-
-<p>The old man drily promised to observe the message,
-and then both drunk to the success of the voyage.</p>
-
-<p>‘To-morrow evening, then, you turn your faces eastward?’
-said the cavalier.</p>
-
-<p>‘If there be but a breath to clear us of the land, I
-trust we may say our vespers at sea,’ replied the merchant.</p>
-
-<p>‘And if there be but that same breeze,’ I whispered to
-myself, ‘you may chance say your matins aboard the
-Will-o’-the-Wisp.’</p>
-
-<p>Then as the couple walked towards the cabin-stairs, I
-lowered myself into the shallop in safety, whispering to
-my comrades the good news I had overheard. They
-could scarce refrain from shouting, but caution overmastering
-joy, we pulled swiftly away. To some degree,
-however, our good fortune had made us bold, and instead
-of rowing out straight to sea, we made for the principal
-cluster of ships, as they lay in the line of our progress
-towards the schooner. We had passed several, when we
-suddenly heard the dash of several oars, vigorously
-pulled, close aheap.</p>
-
-<p>‘Santa Maria!’ cried the negro, springing up, for he
-was terribly frightened at being found with us, ‘Santa
-Maria—the guard-boat!’</p>
-
-<p>And, true enough, just round the bows of a large
-tartan came a great launch, impelled by six oarsmen, and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_219">[Pg 219]</span>
-with a glitter of arms and lanterns shining out of her.
-Well, we had hardly time to gasp, when, with a great
-clamour at our sudden appearance, and all her crew
-starting up from their oars, the Spanish boat ran right
-into the starboard quarter of the shallop, hitting us a
-blow, which well nigh swamped the light craft; the
-Spaniards roaring out to curse our stupidity in not having
-got out of the way. For all this, we might have got
-clear off, they taking us, in the dark and confusion, for
-one of their own boats, had not Simon Radley shouted
-out involuntarily a great oath, cursing them for clumsy
-Spanish thieves, that knew not where they rowed. At
-this, a Spaniard aboard, who, it seems, knew the sound
-of our language, cried out—‘Los Ingleses—los Ingleses!’
-and straightway our enemies, yelling and screeching like
-madmen, jumped up with intent to board us. Half-a-dozen
-pistol shots went off in a minute, as I shouted to
-my small crew to pull for their lives, and the boat started
-forward, scraping past the oars of the launch. Just then
-we gave a loud hurrah, as Englishmen love to do, to
-show their mettle. The bowman of the Spanish boat
-made a desperate leap, alighting with a surge on the
-stern of our shallop. Even while he was in the air, I
-started up to grapple with him. Our arms grasped each
-other’s doublets. I felt his hot breath on my cheek.
-We stood erect but for a moment, twining, as it were,
-around each other’s limbs, and then both of us, linked
-with brawny muscles together, fell splash into the sea,
-amid a great shout, which mingled in my ears with the
-rushing and gurgling of the water, into which we
-plunged. For a brief space I thought we must be
-drowned together, so desperate was the clutch with
-which we clung round each other’s throats; but rising
-in a minute to the surface, I found myself amid the
-blades of the Spanish oars, and, so clinging to them, I
-fought with my foeman, seeking to cast off his grip. At
-the same time I looked about for the shallop, but she
-was not to be seen, having evidently got off clear. And
-so, when the Spaniards grasped me to haul me into their<span class="pagenum" id="Page_220">[Pg 220]</span>
-boat, I fought and struggled desperately, that the shallop
-might have the greater start, in case they pursued her.
-At length, however, being mastered, I was dragged into
-the guard-boat, just as, half an hour before, the negro was
-dragged aboard the shallop, and cast violently down on
-my face in the stern sheets, while my hands were fastened
-behind me. This done, one of my captors gave me
-a kick, and told me to sit up, which I did, in the centre
-of a circle of ferocious-looking sailors and soldiers, who all
-began to question me at once, with the most savage oaths
-and curses; to all of which I replied never a word, but
-shook my head, as though quite ignorant of the language.
-So presently, the officer in command, thinking,
-no doubt, that it might be so, ordered silence, and then
-saying that it was useless to chase the small boat in the
-dark, and that the prisoner must be taken ashore, and
-given up to the alcaide, bade his men stretch to their
-oars, which they did; and, presently, passing close by the
-galleon, my old friend Davosa called out to know what
-was the matter. The officer who steered answered, that
-they had come upon an English boat lurking in the harbour,
-and had captured one of her crew, and that he
-suspected there were more of the rogues not far off.
-Then presently, coming to a quay or jetty, they forced
-me up the slippery steps, and being guarded by two soldiers,
-each with a drawn sword they marched me away.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="r10">
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XX">CHAPTER XX.<br><br>
-<span class="fs80">I AM TRIED AND TORTURED BY THE SPANIARDS.</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p>My heart was sad enough and heavy enough, I warrant
-the reader, as I turned my back upon the sea, and
-toiled through the dry hot sand of the beach, followed by
-a group of the boat’s crew. There was no one stirring in
-the town, only we heard the echo of songs, and the
-jingle of glasses, from taverns or posadas, where drunken
-sailors were carousing. Presently we passed through<span class="pagenum" id="Page_221">[Pg 221]</span>
-several very narrow streets, not savoury by any means;
-for rotting garbage lay thick and foul around, and overhead
-the far-projecting eaves, almost meeting each other,
-seemed to have been built so as to keep the stenches the
-better in. Once I heard the twangle of a guitar, or some
-such instrument. This was as we passed a house, nearly
-hidden in orange and other trees, and situated in a
-retired corner of an open space amid gardens; and,
-looking for the musician, I saw beneath a balcony the
-slender form of a young man, of just such a size and
-shape as my gay cavalier Don José—that is to say, so
-well as I could judge in the light of the newly-risen
-moon. But I had other fish to fry than to attend to his
-love-making; for, to tell the truth, I felt by no means
-certain that I would not be hanged for a spy. All the
-stories of Spanish cruelty I had ever heard—and they
-were not a few—came up into my head; and I think,
-when I called to mind the tortures they ofttimes put
-their prisoners to, in order to make them reveal what
-they knew of their comrades’ designs, I felt a greater
-sinking of heart than even the idea of the halter gave me.
-But, notwithstanding, my good Scots blood was but for a
-minute chilled; and then it rushed with fiery force
-through all my veins, and involuntarily I raised my voice,
-and made oath by all I worshipped, and all I loved, that
-they might wrench my limbs out of me ere they got a
-word to their purpose.</p>
-
-<p>‘What does the rogue say?’ inquired the lieutenant,
-for such he was who walked behind. My sentinels
-answered that I spoke somewhat in an outlandish gibberish
-they could not understand; and presently, seizing me by
-each shoulder, they turned down a great arched gateway,
-beneath a long straggling house, with pillars in the
-front, and a flag over the roof. Here were sentries, who
-challenged our party and received the countersign, and
-then we entered a large bare room on the ground floor,
-which was dimly lighted by but one lantern, placed at a
-desk, where a soldier, whom I judged to be a sergeant,
-was writing. Along the sides of this room ran a slanting<span class="pagenum" id="Page_222">[Pg 222]</span>
-ledge of wooden boards, on which hard bed full a score of
-soldiers lay sleeping in their <em>ponchos</em>, or loose cloaks.</p>
-
-<p>‘What springald have we here?’ said the sergeant,
-rising from his writing, and flinging the full light of the
-lantern, which did not cause any very great illumination,
-over me, as I stood, somewhat pale, I daresay, and all
-dripping from my bath. But just at that moment the
-lieutenant, who was my captor, entering, the sergeant
-saluted after military fashion, and despatching one of his
-men, the officer on duty presently walked in, having his
-uniform doublet unbuttoned, and a silk napkin tied round
-his head, as though he had been roused from an after-supper’s
-nap.</p>
-
-<p>The officers made each other very ceremonious bows,
-and then he of the sea delivered me formally up to he of
-the land, as a person unable or unwilling to give any
-account of myself, and captured from a strange boat in
-the harbour, one of the crew of which, at all event, spoke
-English. The word made quite a sensation in the guardroom.
-The half-waking soldiers rolled off their benches,
-and came scowling and muttering about—the sergeant,
-bestirring himself, went to his desk, and from a clash of
-iron there I concluded, and justly, that he was selecting
-his heaviest pair of handcuffs—and the officer with the
-napkin round his head, who did not appear altogether
-sober, crossed himself very religiously, and, cursing me
-for a damnable heretic, ordered the men back, telling
-them that they would see me much better when I came
-to be hanged. He then demanded whether I understood
-any Spanish? to which interrogatory, as I had previously
-determined, I replied that I did a little; and then, to
-their great astonishment, I asked very fiercely whether
-Great Britain and Spain were at war, that an English
-mariner was to be dragged out of his boat while giving
-offence to none, forcibly bound, and taken to a Spanish
-watch-house.</p>
-
-<p>‘<em>Madre de Dios</em>—here’s a goodly crowing,’ cried the
-officer of the watch; ‘why, thou pernicious heretic and
-contemner of saints, thou buccaneering and piratical<span class="pagenum" id="Page_223">[Pg 223]</span>
-rogue, for such I see thee with half an eye, what
-business hast thou or any of thy pestilent countrymen
-to sail these seas, which belong to His Most Catholic
-Majesty, the seas of the Spanish Indies? I tell thee
-thou shalt be hanged, were it for nothing else but
-rousing me from a comfortable doze; therefore, bethink
-thee of thy sins, and that the more speedily, inasmuch as
-their catalogue is, doubtless, long, and thy time as surely
-short.’</p>
-
-<p>Having made this speech, the gentleman staggered
-slightly, and then, recovering himself, looked round as if
-to say, ‘Who suspects that I have taken too much to
-drink? if there be any, let him stand forth and say so;’
-then, shaking his head very gravely, he observed that the
-world was getting wickeder every day, and added that he
-was much concerned thereat. Here the sea lieutenant,
-as fearing a scandal, broke in, and suggested that I
-should be at once taken before the alcaide; but the
-sergeant, assuring him that that was out of the question,
-inasmuch as his honour was then supping with his reverence,
-the chief canon, and that, above all things, his honour
-disliked to be disturbed at meal times—the captain of the
-guard interposed, and, swearing that he respected the
-peculiarity of the alcaide, it being, indeed, one in which
-he confessed himself a sharer, ordered the sergeant to
-lock me carefully up until the morning, and to give me
-the dirtiest cell and the heaviest irons, in honour of the
-Catholic religion. Then, addressing me again, he said
-that I might make myself easy, for he saw the gallows in
-my face; and so, taking the arm of the naval lieutenant,
-he swaggered out. The sergeant then approached,
-holding the irons; these consisted simply of two rings for
-the wrists, connected by a chain about six inches long.
-There was no use in resisting; so the cold, greasy-feeling
-metal speedily enclasped my wrists, each ring locking
-with a smart snap.</p>
-
-<p>‘How came it that your comrades deserted you, friend?’
-quoth the sergeant, in rather an amicable tone.</p>
-
-<p>‘I will tell you nothing about my comrades,’ I replied;<span class="pagenum" id="Page_224">[Pg 224]</span>
-‘I do not want to be uncourteous, but you shall hear
-nothing from me on that score.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Hum!’ said the sergeant, ‘that is but a bad tone to
-take. We shall see about that to-morrow. However,
-the thing is your own business, not mine; so come along,
-and if you are used to lying hard, you can sleep
-upon it.’</p>
-
-<p>I followed my jailer, who really was not an uncivil
-man, through several long passages, with great doors,
-studded like the doors of tolbooths, with iron nails.
-The lantern cast a dim fickle glare in these hot airless
-passages, and the cockroaches went whirring along,
-dashing their horny bodies and buzzing wings against the
-glass covering the light, and in our faces.</p>
-
-<p>‘Here is your quarters, my Buccaneer,’ said the
-sergeant, stopping at a door nail-studded like the rest,
-and marked No. 15. ‘There are worse rooms in the place,
-so you have to thank me for this. Your countrymen
-are not always so civil when we fall into their clutches.’</p>
-
-<p>I hastened to assure him that he was quite mistaken
-in that matter, but he cut me short, and, unlocking the
-door, made a sign for me to enter, saying that there was
-a chair on which I could sleep if I had a mind. Then he
-locked the heavy door behind me with a great clang and
-crash, and shot two or three bolts, after which I heard his
-footsteps die away as he walked back to the guard-room.
-The cell or dungeon in which I was confined was a
-narrow, bare room; the door paved with flagstones and
-very filthy. This I ascertained by the first step I took.
-I felt the walls; they were composed of large roughly
-hewn stones, very strong and dungeon-like. Up in one
-corner, close to the roof, and almost ten feet from the
-floor, was a small window, barred with iron. Through
-this a ray of bluish-tinted moonlight streamed down,
-and showed me the chair which the sergeant spoke of. I
-dragged it into a corner, and sitting down with a heavy
-heart, I began, for the first time since I was taken, to
-meditate on my situation. I had never before sat a
-prisoner in a jail, and the gyves felt sad and strange upon<span class="pagenum" id="Page_225">[Pg 225]</span>
-my wrists. How silent, and dismal, and hot, the place
-was! what a change from the breezy deck and the
-clattering voices aboard the ’ Will-o’-the-Wisp.’ I
-listened and listened until I almost thought I could
-distinguish the deep hoarse tones of Stout Jem and
-Nicky Hamstring’s cheering laugh. Was I ever to see
-them again? I had my doubts of it. For the present,
-at all events, our enterprise was balked. The Spaniards
-would doubtless send out a squadron of their armadilloes.
-The schooner would be forced to leave the coast, and
-when or where, even supposing I was to get scot free out
-of the hands of my present jailers, I could meet her again,
-was but a discouraging question to put to myself. To-morrow
-I was to appear before the alcaide, and perhaps
-his court was but a stage on the way to the gallows. To
-be strung up and choked at the end of a rope—faugh!
-why did I not die upon a bloody deck, amid the thunder
-of our guns, and with the anthem of my comrades’
-cheers ringing through my brain? Or, why was I
-not to take up my rest like my father before me in the
-sea, which was my home, swept over by a stifling
-wave in some wild mid-watch, or calmly sinking with the
-sinking ship? These were not pleasant subjects to
-ponder on, but they would flow into my head as water
-drains into a leaky vessel. I tried hard, but vainly, to
-keep them out. I tried to sing a jolly sea song I had
-often heard my comrades chant most lustily:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry fs80">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“Aloof! and aloof! and steady I steer,</div>
- <div class="verse indent6">’Tis a boat to our wish,</div>
- <div class="verse indent6">And she slides like a fish,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">When cheerily stemm’d and when you row clear!</div>
- <div class="verse indent6">She now has her trim,</div>
- <div class="verse indent6">Away let her swim.</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Mackerels are swift i’ the shine of the moon!</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">And herrings in gales when they wind us,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">But timing our oars, so smoothly we run,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">That we leave them in shoals behind us—</div>
- <div class="verse indent6">Then cry one and all!</div>
- <div class="verse indent6">Amain! for Whitehall!</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">The Diegos we’ll board to rummage their hold,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">And drawing our steel, they must draw out their gold.”</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_226">[Pg 226]</span></p>
-<p>The first verse of this song, called ‘Sir Francis Drake’s
-Triumph,’ I got through. In the first line of the second
-my voice choked as though there were churchyard dust
-in my throat. I got up and walked to and fro in the
-cell. Through the window I could see the little square
-patch of blue sky, dotted as full of stars as the door
-behind me was full of nail-heads. Through the opening
-there floated the rich smell of flowers and herbs wetted
-with the cooling dews of the night. There was a garden,
-belonging, probably, to the alcaide, or governor, behind
-my prison. I tried, why, I know not, perhaps my nervous
-restlessness impelled me, to clamber up and look out,
-but my fettered hands forbade. So, at length, thinking
-it wisest to attempt to compose myself to sleep, I flung
-me down on the bench, and though the chill of my wet
-clothes sent shudderings through me, I at length fell off
-into a disturbed doze, dreaming confused and frightful
-visions, which every now and then woke me up with a
-great start.</p>
-
-<p>In the morning I had some bread, stock-fish, and water
-for breakfast, and was thereafter conducted before his
-worship the alcaide. The chamber which was his court
-was a barely-furnished room, with a dais, or raised step,
-on which was placed a long table. Behind it stood a
-comfortable leather chair—the throne of justice. On
-one side of the table there was a desk all strewed with
-papers, where sat the clerk. There was no bar for the
-accused, who simply stood in the centre of the floor,
-surrounded by his guards or jailers, while a few benches
-round the walls furnished accommodation for the spectators.
-When I entered, the alcaide seemed just to have
-taken his seat. He was a burly, morose man; his
-swarthy face all torn and seamed by the smallpox, and a
-blue scar rising up from one of his black bristling eyebrows.
-He had great gold earrings, and his thick brown
-fingers were gemmed with rings. The clerk, who sat
-near, next attracted my notice. He was an old little
-man, and all his lean weasen face was one pucker of
-wrinkles, out of which gleamed two greenish eyes, sparkling<span class="pagenum" id="Page_227">[Pg 227]</span>
-like those of the ferret, as the creature fixes its long
-front teeth in the jugular artery of its prey. As I gazed
-upon the aspect of my judge, and his counsellor and
-assistant, I felt my hopes of life and liberty oozing out
-of me at every pore. Two more ill-looking gentlemen
-you might not find in a long day’s search. The court
-was tolerably well filled with spectators, for the news of
-an English pirate, as they called me, captured in the
-harbour, had spread like wildfire, and I found myself the
-centre of a thick mass of swarthy faces, and black gleaming
-eyes, and long curling jet-black moustaches. The
-officer of the boat which had captured me, was placed,
-out of compliment to his quality, upon a chair near the
-judge, and close by him sat the military gentleman who
-had been so certain of my being hanged when delivered
-to him over-night. This man had very bloodshot eyes,
-and a fierce look; indeed, he seemed made of the same
-kidney as the alcaide, to whom he frequently whispered,
-in a hoarse, husky voice. The sergeant or the soldiers
-I did not see at all. My jailers were mere ordinary
-turnkey-looking fellows, not rougher or more brutal than
-most of their class. Just before the proceedings commenced,
-who should enter but my old acquaintance, for
-such I considered him, Don José! He made his way
-through the crowd very cavalierly, and ascending the
-dais, was welcomed by the dignitaries there, with whom
-he seemed tolerably well acquainted, and presently had a
-chair brought him, and talked and laughed gaily, until
-the alcaide hemming loudly, and settling himself in his
-seat, the old ferret-eyed clerk took up his pen, and the
-court was formally opened.</p>
-
-<p>‘Bring up the prisoner!’ said my judge, and I was
-moved forward nearly to the table.</p>
-
-<p>The clerk peered at me with his green eyes.</p>
-
-<p>‘I think the fellow is like one of the gang of that
-notorious thief and murderer, called Morgan. If so, the
-proceedings need not last long; the individual called
-Morgan, and all his band, being already many times condemned
-for murder, sacrilege, treason, and robbery committed<span class="pagenum" id="Page_228">[Pg 228]</span>
-by them on the high seas, in the islands, on the
-main, and elsewhere.’</p>
-
-<p>It was the clerk who spoke thus, in a thin squeak, like
-the cheeping of rusty iron.</p>
-
-<p>‘I said, when I saw him last night,’ added the army
-officer, ‘that there was gallows written in the heretic’s
-face.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Strong corroborative testimony that!’—said Don
-José, with a sneer, which he seemed not to think it worth
-the trouble to conceal. ‘Worthy alcaide, do you not
-think the case all but proved against the prisoner? My
-most astute friend, Lopez’—here he bowed to the clerk,
-who glanced back at him with wrathful eye,—‘and my
-warlike friend, Guzman’—here he indicated the scowling
-officer—‘seem inclined to save everybody, but the hangman,
-any trouble in the matter.’</p>
-
-<p>The alcaide, whose perceptions appeared none of the
-quickest, looked from one to the other of the speakers,
-with a grim smile, and then asked whether I could talk
-Spanish; I answered I could; and so the examination
-began. I told very truly my name and country; I said
-I was a mariner on board a schooner, sailing under
-British colours. I added, that I had been seized by an
-armed boat, and dragged out of my own; that the assault
-had been made upon me and my boat, that there was
-no law or justice for it, and that the Spaniards well
-knew.</p>
-
-<p>Now, although I took this tone, I was very well aware
-that it would serve me nothing. For, although England
-and Spain were at peace, yet so were never Englishmen
-or Spaniards to the south of the line; whichever fell into
-the other’s hands smarted for it; and that all of us knew
-right well, and I had made up my mind accordingly.</p>
-
-<p>‘Friend,’ quoth the spiteful clerk, ‘do not choke yourself
-with big words, insomuch as we shall presently save
-you the trouble by means of a gallows, which ever
-standeth in the court-yard, with a convenient rope.’</p>
-
-<p>‘I knew by his face it is what he would come to,’
-replied Guzman.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_229">[Pg 229]</span></p>
-
-<p>‘Truly, friend,’ said Don José, addressing him, ‘you
-have a very pretty knack at the telling of fortunes—much
-serving to encourage and support your fellow-creatures
-at a pinch.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Silence!’ proclaimed the alcaide, ‘the course of justice
-must not be interrupted.’ The little clerk made a bow,
-and Don José laughed outright.</p>
-
-<p>‘Why did you enter in your boat the harbour of
-Carthagena?’ the judge demanded.</p>
-
-<p>I said, that not recognising his authority to ask I
-should not answer the question.</p>
-
-<p>‘Take down,’ said the alcaide, ‘that he denies the authority
-of the king of Spain in this, his new empire.’</p>
-
-<p>The clerk obeyed, with a sort of joyful chuckle.</p>
-
-<p>‘On what voyage were you bound?’ I was next asked.</p>
-
-<p>I remained mute.</p>
-
-<p>‘We shall make him find his tongue presently,’
-grinned the clerk; ‘even though we should squeeze it
-out of his thumbs.’</p>
-
-<p>I guessed the meaning of this hint, but still held my
-peace.</p>
-
-<p>‘Where was your ship when you came into the harbour?—speak,
-sir!’ thundered the alcaide, ‘or it will be
-the worse for you.’</p>
-
-<p>But I answered very quietly, but firmly, that these
-were matters on which he could not expect me to give
-him any satisfaction. At this the little ferret-eyed man
-grinned and rubbed his hands, after which he took down
-my answer, very formally.</p>
-
-<p>‘Dost thou know—thou heretical rogue—that the
-very shadow of the gallows is upon thee!’ cried the
-alcaide. ‘If thou valuest thy life, at the rate of a brass
-maravedi, make a clean breast of it. Confess—speak the
-designs of the pirates, thy comrades, and it may be
-that we will have pity on thy youth; and instead of
-cutting short thy days, send thee to labour for some
-lengthened space in the mines of Darien.’</p>
-
-<p>There was a pause after this alternative had been offered
-to me. Then I collected my thoughts and spoke thus:—</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_230">[Pg 230]</span></p>
-
-<p>‘I am in your power, and I can make no resistance to
-your will, but I pray the judge to consider whether he, a
-Spanish gentleman, being in the hands of his enemies,
-would feel that he did right in betraying staunch comrades
-for the sake of his own life. As to your threats, I
-fear them but little; I am of a race having stout hearts
-and tough sinews, and I tell you, Spaniards, that if I
-come to evil in your hands, there will be those left
-behind me, who will dearly wreak my death on all men
-of your nation, whom the fortune of war may fling into
-their hands. I speak this not in idle braggadocio; I am
-young, and it is hard for me to leave this world, in whom
-are many I love well; but I will not save my life by
-turning a traitor from fear. There have been Spaniards
-ere now in my power, and I let them go. They had not
-even to ask their lives—they were granted freely. We
-English and Scotch mariners love not to spill defenceless
-blood—we rather fight with swords and pikes than with
-halters. But if you be bent upon my death, I warn you
-again, that many a Spanish throat will bleed for it, ere
-the bark in which I was a mariner see Jamaica
-again.’</p>
-
-<p>I spoke this with a warm energy, which surprised myself,
-and a better flow of words than I thought I could
-muster in Spanish. Don José struck his hand upon the
-table as I finished, and cried vehemently out——</p>
-
-<p>‘Well said, by the soul of a Cid! Pedro-y-Monte, you
-must not hang this spark. It will do you no good, man.
-The youth hath a spirit, and bears himself boldly. Pedro,
-you must let the fellow go. What, man! he will not
-take Carthagena from you; I will insure that, although
-my warlike friend Guzman may not feel himself justified
-in saying so much, on behalf of his own valour.’</p>
-
-<p>The officer so alluded to, turned rapidly from red to
-white, and white to red. He mumbled and grumbled to
-himself, and then forced out somewhat about its being
-known; that he, a simple soldier, could not compete in
-word-sallies and figures of speech with so renowned a
-courtier as Don José. He was interrupted by the alcaide,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_231">[Pg 231]</span>
-who said that it was ever his pleasure to honour so honourable
-and great a gentleman as Don José; but here
-was a matter in which he but spoke the written words of
-the law, and these words said that the doom of pirates
-was death.</p>
-
-<p>‘Yes, I grant thee,’ exclaimed my unexpected advocate;
-‘but is the youth a pirate? You go too fast, good
-Master Alcaide. Justice is blind; but you see more
-than there is to behold!’</p>
-
-<p>The alcaide, who evidently wished to keep well with
-Don José, and who as evidently wished to string me up,
-began to get very red in the face, and to mutter half-suppressed
-words of passion. Just then, the ferret-eyed
-man whispered him at one ear, while Captain Guzman
-possessed himself of the other. After listening for a few
-seconds, the judge seemed to decide what he should do;
-accordingly, he hemmed twice, and began in a loud
-pompous style—</p>
-
-<p>‘The court,’ he said, ‘hath been in an unseemly
-manner interrupted by a noble person now present. Such
-irregularities cannot in any way be permitted, even to
-the highest of the land; and it is therefore craved that
-the noble person in question do refrain henceforth from
-interrupting the course of justice.’</p>
-
-<p>Don José, at this laughed scornfully, and flung himself
-back in his chair, which he balanced upon the hinder legs,
-twisting and twirling his moustache at the same time,
-with the air of a man who deems his company vastly
-beneath him, and curling his lip as he did when relating
-the miracle of Our Lady of the Hill blowing up the
-‘Oxford’ man-of-war.</p>
-
-<p>The wrinkled man next took up the speech. Peering
-with the bitterest glances out of the corner of his blinking
-eyes at Don José, he squeaked out, that those suffering
-banishment for offences committed against the law,
-were not the most proper supporters of the authority of
-his Majesty.</p>
-
-<p>The hidalgo answered, by removing his sombrero, and
-bowing, with a wonderful air of mock gravity and condescension,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_232">[Pg 232]</span>
-to his reprover. Then the examination recommenced:</p>
-
-<p>‘Did you not arrive with your comrades off this peaceful
-coast in an armed ship, your intent being to kill,
-sink, burn, and destroy?’ the alcaide next demanded, with
-ruffled brow, and a savage eagerness in his speech.</p>
-
-<p>I remained mute. ‘Silence gives consent,’ said the
-clerk. Don José shrugged his shoulders, and leisurely
-used a golden pick-tooth. The clerk wrote down something,
-probably an entry, that I had confessed that such
-were our intentions.</p>
-
-<p>‘Were you not taken in the act of playing the spy
-in the harbour of Carthagena?’ roared the alcaide again.</p>
-
-<p>I still remained mute. What need was there of speech?
-The alcaide and the clerk consulted together; then the
-former made a sign to one of the turnkeys, who stood by
-me. The man nodded and withdrew. This motion did
-not escape Don José, who forthwith rose up, and said
-very briskly—</p>
-
-<p>‘Señor Monté, beware you do not somewhat transcend
-your commission. I have not lost my interest at
-the court of Castile. That youth may be a pirate, but
-you have in noways proved it. Besides he hath borne
-himself both modestly and manfully. I am of a house
-which hath ever protected the weak against the strong;
-and I swear, by your Lady of the Hill, that if the youth
-come to wrong, you and your underlings shall answer
-and abide the consequence!’</p>
-
-<p>At this, there was a loud and threatening murmur
-among the spectators; and the turnkeys, thinking that
-Don José might attempt a rescue single-handed, gripped
-me tightly. As for the alcaide, his grim and disfigured
-features grew white, and worked and grinned with spite,
-while the little wrinkled man, shaking with rage, whispered
-tremulously to his superior. In a minute the
-alcaide burst out. He started off his seat, and with his
-fists clenched, and the shaggy hairs of his moustache
-bristling for very passion, he roared out—</p>
-
-<p>‘A pretty thing—a pretty thing I that I am thus<span class="pagenum" id="Page_233">[Pg 233]</span>
-crossed and insulted in my own court; that my warnings
-and reproofs are set at naught, and I am threatened on
-the very judgment-seat! Caramba! Let those who do
-so look to it. Who dare come between me and—’</p>
-
-<p>‘And your prey, kite!’ said Don José, with the old
-bitter sneer gleaming on his face.</p>
-
-<p>The alcaide foamed at the mouth, and bellowed rather
-than spoke.</p>
-
-<p>‘The pirate—the pirate shall die the death! I say
-it! Here prevail no traitors’ counsels!’</p>
-
-<p>‘Whoso says I am a traitor,’ cried Don José, ‘lies in
-his foul throat, and I will push the words back into his
-lungs with my sword!’ So saying, he advanced upon the
-judge.</p>
-
-<p>‘Guards—guards!’ screamed out the clerk. ‘Turn
-out the guards! Where are the soldiers? Treason!
-The life of the alcaide is in danger!’</p>
-
-<p>At the same time, the mob in the court, who had
-hitherto remained passive, burst into loud execrations,
-and clenched fists and gleaming knives were shaken at
-Don José. The latter drew himself up with that majestic
-motion and gesture, which your high-bred Spaniard knows
-how to assume, and curling his thin lip, and flashing his
-black eyes upon the roaring crowd, stood, unmoved as a
-stone statue in the aisle of a minster.</p>
-
-<p>Meantime, the alcaide entirely threw off all appearance
-of a judge’s impartiality.</p>
-
-<p>‘Townsmen!’ he shouted, ‘are we to be insulted, spit
-on, and because, forsooth, our contemner is a noble of
-Castile?—are we to cower as meek as flogged hounds
-before his highness? I say the fellow before us is a
-pirate. He is, at all events, an Englishman, which means
-the same thing. He is a heretic and a buccaneer-spy,
-and he shall strap for it. Holy Mother! shall we turn
-loose the rogue to prey upon our vitals? I hate him—I
-hate his race! they have spoiled great ventures
-of precious merchandise; they have captured ships I
-equipped; they have harried treasures I amassed; they
-pillage and harass our lawful trade; they intrude themselves<span class="pagenum" id="Page_234">[Pg 234]</span>
-on our coasts, and in our seas; they have burnt
-Panama; they have taken Nicaragua; they have taken
-Santa Maria; they have taken Gibraltar in Venezuela;
-they have raged and thirsted for our blood; they are the
-enemies of our faith, and of our nation; and so may my
-right hand wither, may my right arm wither from socket
-to wrist, but those of the murthering pirates who come
-within my grasp, shall go thieving no more! Said I well,
-townsmen—said I well?’</p>
-
-<p>This furious tirade was answered by a great shout
-from the people, who crowded round me, cursing and
-flashing their broad-bladed knives in my face. One
-fellow raised his arm to strike; I saw the swell of the
-moving muscles, and the glitter of the poised knife, when
-Don José, with one bound leaped from the dais, and
-scattering the crowd, as a charge of horse scatters broken
-infantry, he dashed up the arm raised to stab, and drawing
-his rapier, the mob fell back from him, while he
-shouted in tones which rung like trumpet-notes——</p>
-
-<p>‘Hounds that you are!—would you murder in cold
-blood an unarmed and manacled man?’</p>
-
-<p>There was dead silence for near a minute. ‘Alcaide
-of Carthagena,’ continued my defender, ‘look well to
-yourself—what I have done, was that the ends of justice
-might be served, and I will answer for my acts. I can
-do no more—I leave this man in your hands—you shall
-be answerable for your treatment of him. Make way
-there, and permit me to go forth.’</p>
-
-<p>Again the mob yielded a passage. ‘He speaks like a
-king,’ said one fellow. ‘Truly, he hath the bearing of
-an emperor,’ murmured another. And so, still holding
-his unsheathed rapier in his hand, his features being calm
-and composed, save that there was on his forehead a
-slight flush, and a hot sparkle gleaming in his eye, he
-passed through the yielding crowd, who instinctively fell
-back before him—walking with the port of a conqueror,
-who enters a fallen city—this man—a banished libertine—but
-still a grandee in whose veins ran the haughty
-blood of Old Castile!</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_235">[Pg 235]</span></p>
-
-<p>As Don José disappeared, I felt that it was all over
-with me. His advocacy failing, I stood in a position
-much worse than before. I was the cause that a friendship,
-or at least an intimacy, had turned to a bitter enmity,
-and that the alcaide had been publicly insulted on
-the judgment-seat. Therefore, I tried to compose my
-mind, so as to withdraw it from things of the world,
-which already began to seem like matters in which others
-might have an interest, but which possessed none for me—like
-things, indeed, which were but dreamings, wherein,
-to him who stands upon the last step of life, is nought,
-save only deceitfulness and vanity. I was roused from
-this fit of musing by the harsh voice of the alcaide, who,
-having now recovered his composure, thought proper,
-perhaps, to smooth down somewhat of his last oration.</p>
-
-<p>‘Despite,’ quoth he, ‘despite the ill-advised attempt of
-a noble person, now gone forth, to bar the proceedings
-of this court, the prisoner may depend upon it he shall
-receive just judgment at our hands.’</p>
-
-<p>The clerk grinned to himself, and bowed to his master,
-who called upon him to read a decree of the court
-which it seems had just been written. It was to this
-effect:—</p>
-
-<p>‘The accused, a Scots mariner, by name Leonard
-Lindsay, a buccaneer, or pirate of the sort called Brethren
-of the Coast, unlawfully in arms against his Most Christian
-Majesty, having refused to answer certain interrogatories
-put to him in open court, it is decreed that his
-examination be continued in private.’</p>
-
-<p>By the hum which arose, and the broken words I could
-catch uttered around me, when this decree was read, I
-was presently aware of its real meaning. It signified interrogatory
-by torture. I clenched my teeth, and made
-a great effort to show no sign—not even by the tremor of
-a finger—of flinching. The turnkeys touched me on the
-shoulder, and I walked mechanically out between them.
-We passed through divers corridors, I taking but little
-notice, however, where we went, until we arrived in a bare
-chamber; here there was a heavy table of plain wood and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_236">[Pg 236]</span>
-one or two benches, but most part of the room was occupied
-with some machines or apparatus, the nature of
-which I guessed, but the forms whereof were concealed
-by a coarse linen cloth flung over them. This cloth was
-stained with patches of blood. Beside the table stood
-two men; one of them, a thin, mean-looking personage,
-poorly dressed in a worn doublet, with a cold passionless
-face and stony eyes. The other was portly and pleasant-looking,
-and seeing me advance, eyed me from head to
-foot, saying at the same time, ‘Hum! a goodly patient.’</p>
-
-<p>‘<em>El medico</em>,’ whispered one of my conductors. He had
-no cause to tell me of the profession of the doctor’s companion.
-Close behind me came the alcaide, his clerk, and
-the ruffianly captain. The naval gentleman was not there,
-and on the ferret-eyed man asking for him, an attendant
-said that senor, the lieutenant, had been sent for in haste
-from the harbour. Our group was now ranged in a circle,
-I being opposite to the alcaide, the executioner standing
-on one side of me, and the doctor on the other. The
-clerk carried an open book for writing in, and a turnkey
-beside him held the ink-bottle.</p>
-
-<p>‘Accused,’ said the alcaide, ‘do you still refuse to reply
-to the questions put to you in open court, and which
-shall now be rehearsed by the clerk?’</p>
-
-<p>I said I would not put him to the trouble of reading
-them—I would tell nothing.</p>
-
-<p>‘Take off his handcuffs,’ said the magistrate. They
-were removed. The executioner looked inquiringly at
-his patron.</p>
-
-<p>‘I am not a cruel man,’ said the latter, drawling out
-his words, as though longer to enjoy my suspense and
-horror. ‘I would not wrench thy handsome limbs so as
-to spoil their symmetry. No, no; gentle means at first,
-Mr. Provost-Marshal—a squeeze or so on the nerve of
-the thumb, no stout-hearted Buccaneer can complain of.’</p>
-
-<p>Instantly the provost-marshal, as though he had anticipated
-this commencement, whipped from his pocket a
-little instrument of iron. It was a thumb-screw, a
-‘thumbikin,’ as my countrymen called it, and long was it<span class="pagenum" id="Page_237">[Pg 237]</span>
-remembered with curses in many a strath, and on many
-a hill side, in my native land. For the dragoons of
-James Graham, of Claverhouse, were wont to carry them
-in their pouches or haversacks; and, many a long year
-after I had left the Spanish Indies, when I talked to old
-Scotchmen about my adventures there, and told them of
-the alcaide and the provost-marshal of Carthagena, they
-would reply, ‘Ay, ay, we know somewhat of such torments.
-Even here, in Scotland, many a joint was
-wrenched, and many a bone splintered, of the men who
-in the old troublous days stood staunchly up under
-the blue banner, and bore faithful testimony for a broken
-covenant and a persecuted kirk.’</p>
-
-<p>But I must hasten with the tale of my own trials.</p>
-
-<p>‘Do your duty, provost-marshal,’ said the alcaide, gloating
-on the accursed iron machine; ‘but let us have all
-things in moderation—one thumb at a time; the prisoner
-cannot say that we have no bowels.’</p>
-
-<p>Fortunately for me, as it turned out afterwards, the
-executioner stood upon my left. He laid hold of the
-hand nearest to him with cold, clammy-feeling fingers,
-which touched my flesh, to my thinking, like small twining
-snakes or worms, and with great dexterity slipped the iron
-apparatus upon my thumb, turning at the same time a
-screw, so as to make it press tight. The next twist I
-knew would produce torture.</p>
-
-<p>‘Accused,’ began the alcaide again, ‘if you choose to tell
-us what you know of your comrades’ designs we will, even
-although your obstinacy hath been great, proceed no
-further in this business; if not, in the name of the law
-and the king I ordain the provost-marshal to proceed.’</p>
-
-<p>I said not a word, but drew a long breath, and nerved
-myself, trying to fix and resolutely wind up my mind and
-body to endure. There was a pause for a minute, and
-then the alcaide nodded. The provost-marshal stepped
-forward, grasped my wrist with his left hand, and then, at
-the same time looking steadily into my eyes, twisted the
-screw round with a rapid wrench, and instantly a pang, a
-throb of pain horribly keen, cut, as it were with a knife,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_238">[Pg 238]</span>
-from the thumb up the arm to the shoulder-blade. I felt
-a hot flush come out upon my face, and then, the first
-agonizing jerk over, a horrible tingling began, pricking
-the limb as though myriads of red-hot needles had been
-thrust into it.</p>
-
-<p>‘Do you still refuse to answer the question?’ said the
-alcaide. I bowed. He nodded, as before, and round
-again went the screw. This time the agony was fearful.
-I ground my teeth, my knees shook, and I felt the cold
-sweat start out in beads among the roots of my hair.
-The involuntary desire to scream was almost overmastering,
-but I curbed it with a mighty effort, swallowing
-down, as it were, the anguish, by violent efforts of the
-muscles of the throat. All this time the group who
-surrounded me preserved silence. There was a grim
-smile upon the face of the alcaide, but the ferret eyes of
-his clerk were gleaming with excitement, and his features
-were twisting with very pleasure. The doctor and the
-provost-marshal behaved like two men engaged in a perfectly-indifferent
-matter.</p>
-
-<p>Again the alcaide questioned me, again I made the
-same reply, and again the provost-marshal wrenched
-round the screw. This time, amid the slight squeak of
-the revolving iron, all heard the crackle of the bone; the
-skin too, had given way beneath metallic pressure, and a
-gush of black bruised blood spurted over the iron and the
-thin fingers of the provost-marshal, and then dropped in
-thick plashy globules upon the floor. Almost at the same
-instant a mist came up before my eyes, and hid the fierce
-faces which surrounded me. I tottered, and leant upon
-the surgeon, and a cold feeling of sickness almost unto
-death gripped my very being, and seemed to stop the
-fountains of life. It was the very depth of that suffering
-which drew from me the only low shuddering moan I
-uttered. But hardly had the sound escaped than there
-was a tramp of footsteps rushing into the room, and a
-loud voice which cried—</p>
-
-<p>‘Señor the alcaide is wanted upon the beach; a
-schooner with English colours set, which hath been<span class="pagenum" id="Page_239">[Pg 239]</span>
-hovering in the offing all the morning, is standing in for
-the harbour, as though she would carry the galleon even
-under the very guns of the batteries.’</p>
-
-<p>And in an instant, as though to roar a chorus to the
-words of the messenger, the heavy reports of great guns
-shook the ill-fitting casements of the chamber; and a
-great and confused jangle of many bells, and the echoes
-of a shouting crowd, came floating together upon the air.
-I started up—the mist cleared from before me—even the
-sense of pain and sickness left me, and looking with exultation
-on the pale and scared faces of my tormentors, I
-shouted, ‘Huzza! for the bold Brethren of the Coast!
-Courage, comrades! courage, and the day is our own!’</p>
-
-<p>‘Send the fellow back to his cell,’ said the alcaide, very
-hurriedly. ‘Captain Guzman, turn out your guard.
-We will finish with him when we have finished with his
-comrades in the harbour. Perhaps there will be more to
-deal with presently.’</p>
-
-<p>‘The more the merrier,’ said the ferret-eyed clerk, and
-they shuffled hastily out together. Meantime, the provost-marshal
-unscrewed his thumbikin with as much
-coolness as he had adjusted it. My hand was all bloody
-and swollen. The doctor looked at it, felt the thumb with
-his fingers, and then said, ‘My good fellow, your comrades
-came to your aid just in time; another wrench and
-that hand would be of small use to you for the rest of
-your life.’</p>
-
-<p>The provost-marshal, who was wiping the blood from
-his instrument, smiled meaningly. ‘Why, good doctor,’
-quoth he, ‘considering what is like enough to be the
-extent of the youngster’s life, I do not see the great hardship
-of disabling him.’</p>
-
-<p>The doctor shrugged his shoulders, and walked out.
-The only turnkey who remained clapped his hand on my
-shoulder, and I followed him, binding up my lacerated
-hand with a kerchief. I was presently conducted to the
-same cell as that which I had already occupied; but,
-to my great astonishment, instead of shutting me in and
-leaving me to my meditations, the man first cast a rapid<span class="pagenum" id="Page_240">[Pg 240]</span>
-glance up and down the corridor, and then closing the
-door upon both of us, caught me by the collar of the
-doublet, and whispered:—</p>
-
-<p>‘You have a good friend. Keep up your heart, and
-you may yet have a chance for your life.’</p>
-
-<p>The blessed words fell upon my ears like rain on
-parched herbage.</p>
-
-<p>‘Who—who is it? Of whom do you speak?’ I cried,
-eagerly.</p>
-
-<p>‘Of one who gave a shining doubloon to tell you so
-much; and he bade me add, too, that you should hold
-yourself in readiness for a quick journey.’</p>
-
-<p>‘But, tell me,’ I interrupted—when we heard the voice
-of the provost-marshal without, calling, ‘Lazarillo, Lazarillo,
-what keeps you?’ The turnkey made but one bound
-of it to the door, locked the cell with a clash, and hurried
-away, leaving me with an aching hand, but a palpitating
-and a very grateful heart. All was not yet over with me.
-I had still a right to the rays of the sun. The black
-grave, which in my mind I had seen for the last hour continually
-yawning before me, was gone. Most blessed of
-the moods of the heart, Hope, slid again into my being,
-and sent the hot blood dancing madly through my veins.
-I paced up and down the cell wildly. I tried to leap at
-the barred window. The pain of my lacerated flesh I remembered
-no more; and clenching both fists, I vowed
-that, once without these walls, it was only a dead body
-which the Spaniards would bring back. The roar of the
-conflict in the harbour, which still continued, worked me
-up to the highest pitch of excitement. I sought to distinguish,
-in fancy, between the guns of our enemies and
-those of my friends; and every time I heard the sharp
-ring of the smaller metal, which I concluded was fired
-from aboard the schooner, I broke out in rhapsodies, calling
-upon the ball to fly truly home to its mark, and to
-hit that pestilent alcaide or his ferret-eyed clerk. At
-length I began to cool down, and get somewhat ashamed
-of my fervour. Besides, the noise of cannonading
-abated—the reports of the guns coming fainter and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_241">[Pg 241]</span>
-fainter, as if the fight were being carried on more to seaward.
-From this I judged that the schooner had been
-beaten off. Indeed, I could expect no other termination
-of the attack, which, when I came to think of it in sober
-earnest, appeared to me to be little short of madness, and
-I wondered how Stout Jem had come to attempt it.
-From these matters I began to think more reasonably of
-my own situation. I little doubted but that my unknown
-friend was no other than Don José, who appeared to my
-mind to be as singular a mixture of base and generous;
-qualities as a man could be composed of. But how was he
-to help me? Was the mode of escape to be by force or
-escalade? To cut the window-bars would require a file,
-and to mount to them a ladder. Then, my left hand was
-in a bad condition for either working or clambering, and
-even should I succeed in making my way into the city,
-whither was I to go next? I had no place of refuge, but
-the woods, and without arms or ammunition, little hope
-of aught but a lingering death there, either by starvation
-or wild Indians. Indeed, the more I mused, the more
-gloomy after all my prospects seemed.</p>
-
-<p>The excitement at the first notion of escape thus
-passed away. My wounded hand, although not altogether
-disabled, was very stiff and painful, and I had not even
-the means of washing away the clotted blood. So, sitting,
-in no merry mood, pondering, upon my bench, the
-slow hot hours crept by. The sunlight came in a fiery
-stream where the blue moonbeam had lain the night
-before. The buzz of insects and the rustling of rich
-foliage, waved by the fresh sea-breeze, sounded cheerily
-from without, and sometimes a puff, stronger than common,
-would find its way into the hot cell, and play
-round my cheeks and nostrils, bringing with it the cool,
-fresh savour of the ocean.</p>
-
-<p>It might have been about one o’clock, when the
-friendly turnkey unlocked the door and entered, carrying
-with him a very fair dinner of meat and roasted
-plantains, to which was added a small measure of generous
-Spanish wine. I entreated him, all in a breath, to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_242">[Pg 242]</span>
-give me more information touching my projected escape,
-and also as respected the fate of the schooner. In regard
-to the latter affair, the man said, he believed that the
-attack had only been a sort of a feint, or bravado, and
-that, after some cannonading, a boat with a white flag had
-put off from the schooner, which had thereupon ceased
-firing; but the Spaniards not being willing to come to
-any truce with pirates and sea-robbers, as they called us,
-had continued to fire upon the boat, and a ball breaking
-the oars on one side, and very narrowly missing the
-boat herself, those in her pulled round and back to the
-schooner. A small squadron of armadilloes then got
-under weigh, and the schooner had nothing else for it
-than to stand out to sea, the armadilloes following her,
-and both exchanging long shots at each other. This I
-afterwards understood to be a very fair account of the enterprise,
-which was indeed undertaken only in the hope of
-wresting me out of the Spaniards’ hands. But I had
-other friends at work, as the reader will see. The turnkey,
-who was, or rather pretended to be, in some agitation
-at the thought of the work which he had been
-bribed to undertake, now told me that about two o’clock,
-at the hour when most of the inhabitants of Carthagena
-are in use to take their siesta, or day-sleep he would be
-with me again.</p>
-
-<p>‘You may be thankful,’ quoth he, ‘that you were not
-taken as prisoner to the fort, where, indeed, there would
-be little chance of escape, let you have what friends you
-might; but this is not a regular prison, being only a
-sort of guardhouse, attached to the alcaide’s mansion, for
-the convenience of keeping accused persons for examination.
-Therefore, once out of your cell, and furnished
-with the pass-word, you will have little ado in making
-your flight to the woods, where you must shift for yourself—he
-who has paid me to peril my place in the matter
-having no refuge to offer you.’</p>
-
-<p>The reader may be sure that I exhausted myself in
-compliments and thanks to my benefactor, whom the
-jailer obstinately refused to name, but about whom there<span class="pagenum" id="Page_243">[Pg 243]</span>
-was in my mind no doubt whatever. Neither was I in any
-great surprise, when I came attentively to consider the
-state of matters, at the mode in which the affair was to
-be arranged, and the easy compliance for some trifling
-bribe of the jailer. I called to mind how often I had
-been told that, in almost all Spanish prisons in the Indies,
-the jailers and magistrates were just as great rogues as
-the thieves they dealt with. Nay, I had no doubt but
-that the alcaide himself would have taken a bribe to let
-me go, as readily as the turnkey, only he would have
-been very like to break his engagement, and hang me
-after all; thus gratifying himself in both ways. As it
-was, I considered that my chances were very good. The
-turnkey did not at all seem to apprehend any interruption
-from his comrades. ‘We live in very good intelligence,’
-quoth he; ‘and none of us cares to spoil the
-other’s game. There is but one man I dread, and he, I
-hope, is out of the way. Curses on that sharp-eyed clerk
-of the alcaide’s, he takes a pleasure in marring the best-laid
-schemes.’</p>
-
-<p>But I swore within myself, that were I interrupted by
-this official, he would have small chance of ever looking
-out of his ferret-eyes again. I think the jailer understood
-what was passing in my mind, although I spoke not,
-for he smiled meaningly, as he said, peering into my face,
-with a curious expression on his own—</p>
-
-<p>‘And this clerk is but a weak slip of a man after all.
-I warrant you a stout fellow would smash his brittle
-bones as easily as I would so many pipe-stems. However,
-that is no business of mine. In half an hour, Señor
-the Buccaneer, all will be ready.’</p>
-
-
-<hr class="r10">
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XXI">CHAPTER XXI.<br><br>
-<span class="fs80">HOW I ESCAPE FROM THE SPANISH GUARDHOUSE—AM CHASED BY</span><br>
-<span style="margin-left: 0em;" class="fs80">BLOOD-HOUNDS IN THE WOODS, AND HOW AT LENGTH I FIND A</span><br>
-<span style="margin-left: -23.5em;" class="fs80">STRANGE ASYLUM.</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p>The clock, from a neighbouring church, struck two.
-My cell-door opened gently, and the turnkey appeared,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_244">[Pg 244]</span>
-carrying in his hand a tolerable-sized bundle, which I
-eagerly assisted him to undo. It contained a good suit,
-such as is commonly worn by Spanish sailors, with stout
-leggings fitted for scrambling in the woods, and a broad-brimmed
-and steeple-crowned felt hat. The doublet was
-tied round my waist with a broad silk sash, and into this
-I stuck a gleaming knife, similar to that carried by
-almost all Spaniards. But when the turnkey produced,
-from under his doublet, a short-barrelled carabine, or
-musquetoon—a <em>trabucco</em>, as he called it—with a fair
-supply of shot and slugs, I burst out into exclamations
-of gratitude.</p>
-
-<p>‘Long live Don José!’ I cried. ‘I fear not the woods
-now; there is life and food within this hollow iron.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Look you,’ said the turnkey, ‘here be the words of
-the nobleman who hath sent these. “Tell,” quoth he,
-“tell the Scots mariner, that as he bore himself before
-the alcaide like one whose word and good faith were dear
-to him, that I supply him with these weapons, upon his
-solemn promise that he will use them only to procure
-himself food, and that he will not turn them against
-any Spaniard, excepting only strictly in the way of self-defence.”’</p>
-
-<p>You may be assured that this reasonable pledge I
-gave with the utmost readiness, and poising my musquetoon,
-and trying how it fitted to my shoulder, I cried,
-gaily—</p>
-
-<p>‘Come—come! Despatch—despatch! good master
-jailer; your friends will be rousing themselves from
-their siesta. Faith, man, were you as near the gallows
-as I am every moment I linger here, you would pant to
-hear the free rustle of the branches above you.’</p>
-
-<p>All the while that the turnkey was helping me on
-with my new costume, I kept thinking of where I should
-bend my steps as soon as I got clear of Carthagena. It
-was very likely, I thought, that the schooner would keep
-hovering upon the coast, still waiting for the galleon,
-the sailing of which would no doubt be delayed by what
-had happened. I considered, moreover, that the Will-o’-the-Wisp<span class="pagenum" id="Page_245">[Pg 245]</span>
-would be most likely to ply to the eastward,
-so as to keep the weather-gauge of the port she
-was watching, and that it was quite possible that she
-might approach near enough the shore for me to make a
-signal, by kindling a fire, or by any other means which
-might seem available, in order to attract her notice. So
-I determined, as soon as I could get fairly free of the
-town, to turn to the eastward and to descend again upon
-the coast some eight or ten miles from Carthagena.</p>
-
-<p>‘Now,’ quoth the turnkey, ‘you will easily perceive
-that I am not to be seen in this business. Your escape
-must appear to have been effected by yourself, and it
-will be the more easy, inasmuch as the lock on this door
-has seen much service, and is not difficult to wrench off;
-especially when a man is provided with such a weapon as
-this,’ and he handed to me a strong iron chisel, or rather
-short crow-bar.</p>
-
-<p>‘Listen,’ he continued; ‘I will again lock you up.
-Let five minutes elapse, then wrench open the door;
-take the two first turnings to your left, the next turning
-to your right, the next to your left again, and you are
-opposite the street. A sentry stands there. If he be
-asleep, as is not unlikely, good and well. If he be awake
-and challenge, reply, “Guarda Costa,”—that is the
-countersign. You must then shift for yourself. Farewell,
-Señor Buccaneer, and if ever you meet Don José
-fail not to tell him I behaved honestly by you, and earned
-his doubloons well. You will not forget “Guarda Costa.”
-Adieu.’</p>
-
-<p>The door closed on him; I waited in silence and with
-a beating heart. It was a long five minutes which
-elapsed; but at its expiration, as nearly as I could judge,
-I inserted the short crowbar between the staple which
-held the bolt, and the lintel of the door. The wood was
-crumbling and rotten, and the iron eaten with long
-gathering rust. Gradually, as I applied my strength,
-the mouldy timber gave way beneath the pressure, and
-the metal creaked and crackled. I could have burst it
-off with one effort of my muscles, but I feared to make a<span class="pagenum" id="Page_246">[Pg 246]</span>
-noise; and so, gradually working the point of the crowbar
-further and further into the wreck of the dilapidated
-fastenings, I increased the strain, until at length, with
-one long, steady and vehement wrench, I tore the staples
-from the yielding wood. The metal fell with a clash
-upon the floor; the door, which opened inwardly, swung
-back; and I saw—the ferret eyes and the twitching
-visage of the alcaide’s clerk, staring and grinning through
-the opening.</p>
-
-<p>I started back as though a demon had looked me in
-the face. The small wrinkled and puckered features
-worked and twisted, and the eyes gleamed so as to
-resemble nothing earthly. Then I saw the hand of the
-clerk creep stealthily towards the bosom of his mean
-doublet, without doubt to pluck therefrom a weapon; his
-lips moved, and the first syllables of a cry of alarm had
-passed them, when I sprang forward, and the grasp of
-my fingers round his meagre throat smothered the words.
-All this took place in an instant. I dragged the wretch
-inside the cell; struck to the door with a blow of my
-foot, and clutching both his thin wrists in my left hand,
-gripped his throat with my right, until the skin got blue
-and the eyes protruded all glaring and bloodshot. I
-thought for a moment to strangle him as we stood, but
-as I felt the weak struggles of the hapless creature, who
-writhed like a child in my grasp, my heart softened. I
-released my hold upon his throat.</p>
-
-<p>‘Were you strong and I weak,’ I whispered to him,
-‘there would be little pity shown. You are athirst for
-my blood, but Providence has willed that you shall not
-be gratified. As I grant you mercy now, show mercy
-to others.’</p>
-
-<p>The clerk tried to speak, but only husky murmurs
-passed his lips.</p>
-
-<p>‘Lie there,’ I continued, ‘until your friends come to
-your rescue.’</p>
-
-<p>With that I flung the man upon the floor, so as
-partially to stun him, and then, with the aid of some
-ratline stuff, which sailors go seldom without, and which<span class="pagenum" id="Page_247">[Pg 247]</span>
-was in the pocket of my old doublet, I both bound and
-gagged him, not very completely, it is true, but sufficiently,
-as I believed, to prevent any alarm being given
-until I had got a good start. It was pitiful to see the
-impotent spite with which the manacled creature writhed
-upon the ground, gibbering with his speechless mouth,
-and flashing his green eyes as though he could have shot
-blistering venom out of them upon me. But I had little
-time to bestow upon the spectacle: with a quick step and
-a beating heart I fled along the corridors. During my
-scuffle with the clerk, the turnkey’s directions had never
-ceased to ring in my ears. The two first turnings to the
-left, the next to the right, the next to the left again.
-The silent passages echoed to my footsteps with a hollow,
-ominous sound. There were many nail-studded doors,
-similar to that of my own cell, on either side. As I
-made the last turning, I had a glimpse, in the distance,
-of the guard-room into which I had been at first conducted,
-and then, looking straight ahead, I saw before
-me the narrow street, with its deep, dusty ruts, scorching,
-as it were, in the hot sun. The passage terminated
-in a great gateway, with pillars and a portico, and on the
-left side of the door stood a sentry-box, painted white.
-Pausing for a moment to assume all possible coolness, I
-walked steadily out humming the butt-end of a Spanish
-sea-song, which the manners of that nation sing when
-heaving the anchor to the bows.</p>
-
-<p>Just as I passed the porch I glanced at the sentry.
-He was a young man; his features bronzed almost black
-with the sun, and wearing silver earrings, glittering
-amongst his long greasy curls. The fellow was sitting
-leaning against his sentry-box; his musket, with his
-bayonet fixed, hung carelessly across his knee. As I
-strode by, he half opened his sleepy eyes, and muttered
-mechanically as though speaking in a dream.</p>
-
-<p>‘Guarda Costa,’ I said, carelessly. The man muttered
-something again, and his chin fell upon his breast. Like
-a phantom I glided up the hot and silent street. Not a
-soul was to be seen. The cloth of outside blinds and the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_248">[Pg 248]</span>
-gay draperies hanging from balconies, rustled in the cooling
-wind, while those thin slices of wood, forming what
-are called in the Indies, ‘jalousies,’ clattered with a
-merry rattle. Dogs lay listlessly stretched out in shady
-corners; bullocks, harnessed to clumsy carts, lay chewing
-the cud between the shafts, and two or three mendicants,
-as I judged them from their rags and filth, were stretched
-beneath gateways and under pillars, where the breeze
-came freshest. But the spell of sleep was everywhere.
-Midnight in New Spain might bring the time of gallant
-assignation and joyous revel, but the drowsy afternoon
-shone upon a city steeped in sleep, even as though one of
-the mighty charms which I used to read of in idle chronicles
-of old fancies, were abroad over the dreaming people, one
-of those charms of glamour and gramarye of the days
-when Michael Scott split the Eildon hills in three, and
-Thomas of Erceldoune was courted of the faery queen!</p>
-
-<p>‘So, blessings on that good old Spanish custom, the
-siesta,’ I cried to myself, as I sped along the deserted
-thoroughfare. Carthagena is not large, neither is it
-fortified towards the land side. Very little time had
-therefore elapsed until I found myself fairly beyond the
-city, and running along a rough road, with great plenty
-of trees and bushes on either side, and patches of fields,
-wherein grew the broad brown-leaved tobacco plant, and
-here and there a hut, with a yam garden about it, or the
-country house of a Carthagena merchant, with prim
-terraces and avenues of limes, and fountains sparkling
-among the leaves. These I ran past as speedily as possible;
-but there was no appearance of aught stirring
-about them more than in the city. The siesta was everywhere,
-ay, even in the great woods, which at length I
-reached; the birds sitting motionless upon the branches,
-and the beasts of the earth hiding in dens and holes from
-the fervid noontide heat. The road which I had followed
-gradually disappeared, splitting as it were into many
-little tracks made by hunters or other wanderers in the
-woods. Around me there soon rose rocks and steep
-hills, and the tangled underwood and the long grass<span class="pagenum" id="Page_249">[Pg 249]</span>
-made walking difficult. However, I was in too great
-spirits to feel much weariness. Every step I took was
-almost as a year added to my life. So, at last, when I
-saw that I had really plunged fairly into the wilderness,
-I forced my way amid the rank vegetation, tearing
-through brake and thicket, and singing and shouting
-lustily in the fulness of my heart. The sun was my
-compass, and by him I steered eastwardly.</p>
-
-<p>‘Ho! ho! Stout Jem,’ I cried to myself, ‘mayhap, we
-are but now laying the same course; the gay schooner
-out upon the tilting sea, and he that loves her well amid
-the shady woods and green savannahs of the main. So
-we shall meet again, comrades—we shall meet again!’</p>
-
-<p>In this merry mood I traversed several miles before I
-thought of refreshment or of rest. It was just as my
-limbs began to ache and my breath to come short, as I
-breasted a steep hill, that I came to a fair fountain
-gurgling from a rift in a low mossy rock. It was not an
-unknown well of the wilderness, for human hands had
-placed a doubled leaf, through which, as through a spout,
-the living water ran from the runnel, and tinkled out
-into a natural basin beneath.</p>
-
-<p>So here I sat me down and wiped the perspiration
-from my brow. It was a lonely spot, and I wondered
-whose hands had plucked the leaf and laid it in its place.
-From the basin I speak of, the water ran amid rustling
-reeds, and great floating leaves, and gaudy flowers, until
-it spread itself out into a shallow pool, half covered with
-greasy scum, but elsewhere as clear as the air above it.
-In the centre of the pool sat a little bird of the diver
-species, with the glossy neck and the bright beady eyes
-which I love in water-fowl. He took little notice of me,
-and I sat and watched him as he glided to and fro amid
-the floating leaves and twigs which had fallen from the
-trees. While thus occupied, I heard once or twice the
-distant bay as of a dog.</p>
-
-<p>‘Ho!’ thought I, ‘the siesta is over, and Señors the
-dogs are the first astir.’</p>
-
-<p>My eye fell upon the water-fowl again. It seemed<span class="pagenum" id="Page_250">[Pg 250]</span>
-disquieted, and swam quickly to and fro, making a soft
-quackle, and jerking its little head, as its kind do when
-listening. The bay of the dog was heard again—it seemed
-to have come nearer—and, directly, the water-bird, half
-swimming and half flying, beating the surface with its
-wings as it went, took refuge in the thickest of the sedges
-and disappeared. This little incident roused me. I
-started up and hearkened. Again, the deep hollow echo
-of the hound’s bay struck my ears. It was very different
-from the yelping of a woodman’s cur; and the dogs of the
-Indians do not bark. Immediately a thought flashed upon
-me—a ghastly—appalling thought: the Spaniards were
-upon my track with bloodhounds! Almost instinctively I
-started up and fled, stumbling as I went. I had a horror
-of these fiends of dogs, trained to hunt men; and, as I
-flew along, I thought every moment that I heard the
-savage creatures panting close behind me. After about
-ten minutes’ quick running, I stopped, quite spent, to
-breathe, and, listening for a moment, a faint sound of
-hallooing, and a burst of baying, loud and long, came
-floating on the wind. I turned and fled again, straining
-every nerve mechanically, although I knew but too well
-that, fleet as was my foot, every time it touched the
-ground it left the mark which guided the avengers. I,
-therefore, tried to leap and double, and even got up into
-a tree and swung myself along by means of the interlacing
-branches. But this was slow work, I dropped to
-the ground, and ran again. All this time the voice of
-the dog was sounding nearer and nearer behind me, and
-I wondered how my pursuers could keep up with him, at
-the rate he was evidently running. Nevertheless, I
-loosened the knife in my girdle and prepared for the
-struggle. As I did so, I thought of my blunderbuss.
-Heaven! I had left it behind in my first alarm at the
-well. The token would have told the Spaniards that
-their four-footed guide was as sure as it appeared swift.
-The baying of the accursed hound came close and closer.
-Oh! how I envied the birds as they rose with a rustle
-and a scream from the foliage, and soared away in the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_251">[Pg 251]</span>
-air, which leaves no track to tell of who has left it.
-Covered with sweat and dust, and reeling with fatigue, I
-ran almost at random. Twice I disturbed glistening
-snakes, which coiled their spiral folds and flashed their
-black eyes at me, and then glided away like slimy painted
-ropes pulled by some unseen hand amongst the herbage.
-But at that instant the bite of the labarri, or the hollow
-tooth of the rattlesnake, had hardly more horror for me
-than the gripe of the crunching jaws which were fast
-following on my track. By this time, the thunder of the
-hound’s voice was so close that I involuntarily turned at
-every step to see him make his appearance. The final
-moment came at last. Crashing with a great rustle
-through a bed of yielding bushes, sprang a huge, tawny
-dog, black and foaming at the muzzle. The creature ran,
-cat-like, with his belly close to the ground, his big,
-muscular limbs, showing as supple and slamp as a tiger’s,
-and his broad deep chest, and great hanging ears, all
-speckled white with flakes of foam. I looked for his
-master, but saw none; and, gazing more closely, observed
-a leash round the creature’s neck, and a broken leathern
-thong trailing beside him. This at once explained the
-rapidity with which he had overtaken me—the animal
-having broken away from those who led him, and it also
-sent a cheery flush of hope, dancing through my brain.
-Oh, how I cursed my heedlessness in leaving the carabine
-by the well! A handful of slugs would have stopped the
-blood-hound for ever, and my pursuers deprived of their
-guide, could seek me but at random through the woods.
-Could I manage him with the knife?—that was the question.
-I had no long time to debate it. I must either
-slay or be slain—there was no choice. I stopped, faced
-round, tore off my doublet, and wrapped it, in thick and
-heavy folds, round my left arm—shielding my wounded
-hand in addition, by grasping with it the inside of my
-strong and stiff felt hat. Then clutching my knife in
-my right, I knelt on one knee, and waited for the onset
-of the blood-hound.</p>
-
-<p>I had, indeed, hardly assumed my position of defence<span class="pagenum" id="Page_252">[Pg 252]</span>
-when he was on me. True to the instinct of his kind, he
-lifted neither eyes nor nose from the ground—running,
-truly and steadily, by the scent, until he was scarcely a
-couple of fathoms from me. Then, indeed, he flung up
-his nostrils in the air, and suddenly seeing me, uttered a
-loud splitting yell, champing at the same time the foam
-in a hot shower from his jaws, and then, with a great
-scrambling bound, furious and open-mouthed, pounced
-upon me, driving his teeth into the folds of the doublet,
-which I held before me as a shield, and dashing me, by
-the very force of his spring, over and over amid the grass,
-scrambling and tearing the skin from my shoulders, with
-his huge horny paws, and furiously shaking and riving
-the stuff of the doublet which, luckily for me, was both
-thick and strong. For a moment or two, I had no
-opportunity of using the knife, I could not see where to
-hit. There was before me but a vision of great foaming,
-tearing jaws, and flashing eyes, and struggling limbs—sometimes
-above me—sometimes beneath, as we rolled
-over and over in the scuffle. But at length, I had a
-chance; the broad muscular chest of the noble creature
-was left, for a moment, unsheltered by his fore-legs, and
-in a second I had driven the keen strong knife, through
-and through his lungs, the handle smiting the dog’s
-breast with a hollow blow. There was an immediate
-convulsion of the animal’s limbs. Letting go his hold of
-my doublet, he flung his muzzle into the air, and with a
-sound between a cough and a yell, threw up a hot
-sputtering shower of blood. Quick as thought, my reeking
-knife was withdrawn, and again and again plunged in up
-to the very hilt—the muscles of the creature’s body—a
-moment before, all strained and tense as iron bands—gradually
-collapsed—the fierce eyes turned, so that the
-yellowish whites shone, with a grim glare into mine, and
-it required but a slight effort to shake off the quivering
-and bleeding creature, which as I rose trembling and
-panting from the fray—fell heavily from my limbs, and
-lay gasping in its blood among the grass. Truly, it was
-a noble dog, as large and more powerful than the mightiest<span class="pagenum" id="Page_253">[Pg 253]</span>
-stag-hound, but its deep chest had uttered its last bay,
-its giant limbs had run their last race. The life passed
-out of the quivering flesh, as I stood and gazed at it.
-Then flinging over my shoulders my doublet, all torn,
-and stained with blood and froth, I addressed myself
-again to flight—thankful and joyous for my deliverance.
-‘Three good thrusts of this trusty steel,’ said I to myself,
-sheathing my knife, ‘and the utmost spite of the Spaniard
-has been baffled.’ I was reckoning without my host.
-Hardly had the words escaped my lips, when, again, the
-accursed bay of a blood-hound came floating in the wind.
-I paused and listened with clenched teeth. For an instant,
-I hoped that it might be but the dying growl of the
-animal killed. But, no, he lay stark, and the foam was
-already cooling upon his jaw. Again and again, came
-the ominous sound—I could not be mistaken. My
-pursuers had started with at least a brace of dogs—and
-they were still following fast and hot upon my footsteps.
-A shuddering chill passed all over me, and I felt sick at
-heart—then I roused myself. ‘Perhaps,’ I argued, ‘the
-blood of the dead hound will confuse the scent of the
-living one. I have heard of such things.’ But afterwards
-I learned that the Spaniards, seeing the body from
-a distance, had not allowed their four-footed guide to
-approach it closely, but that leading him in a circle round
-the carcase, the animal had again struck upon my scent—closer
-and fresher than ever. Thus it was, that as I forced
-my way through the thickets of bushes, and long rustling
-grass—I ever heard behind me the hollow boom of that
-accursed creature, as he gave loud tongue, and the distant
-hallooing as the Spaniards answered him with shouts and
-execrations. Summoning my resources, I tried, as I ran,
-to call to mind the legends of men chased with blood
-hounds—of which I had heard in my childhood, and the
-means whereby they had baffled their pursuers. For
-many such tales are told on winter nights by Scottish
-hearths—of the bold moss-troopers of Teviot and Annan,
-and the wild northern caterans beyond the Highland line.
-But my memory seemed to have forsaken me. I could<span class="pagenum" id="Page_254">[Pg 254]</span>
-remember none of the devices which I had so often
-admired—although it is possible that were I keeping a
-calm mid-watch at sea, heaps of such stories would have
-flocked unsummoned into my brain. So I did naught
-save press instinctively forward—having little idea of the
-direction I was pursuing, and indeed seeking only for the
-open glades and avenues of the forest, through which I
-could make the better speed. But hope began again
-rapidly to leave me. The waves roar not after a scudding
-bark, with more unceasing tumult, than there arose
-behind me the clamour of my pursuers. I winded and
-doubled—I ran north—then turned on my heel and
-speeded in the opposite direction; but still, as a cock-boat
-follows a ship to which she is made fast, through all
-her tackings and veerings—so did my pursuers tread
-steadily in my track. I began to grow desperate. Again,
-I drew my knife from its sheath, and stopping, and leaning,
-panting, against a great tree, I made up my mind to rest
-there—recover what strength I could, and sell my life as
-dearly as might be. At that moment, I heard a low
-continuous sound—a deep hollow boom echoing faintly in
-the wood. I listened intently, and then started up,
-almost with the vigour with which I had began my flight.
-I could not be deceived—what I heard was the roar of a
-waterfall, and the sound in an instant brought, as it were,
-a vision before my eyes. It was the vision of an old,
-iron-clasped book, which we had at home at Kirkleslie.
-Its cover was thick parchment, its leaves were brown with
-age, and the letters were strange and quaint. This book
-my father had prized next to the Bible, and those which
-treated of holy things, and often was it in his hands, both
-out at sea and by the cosy ingle-nook in the stormy winter
-time. It was, indeed, an ancient chronicle of the ‘Life
-and Death of King Robert the Bruce,’ and at the same
-instant of time as I remembered it—one sentence in
-particular loomed, as it were, before me, until I could
-almost fancy I saw the very strange old letters quivering
-in the sunshine. This was the sentence:—</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_255">[Pg 255]</span></p>
-
-<div class="blockquot fs80">
-
-<p>“And now the Kynge being sore pressed by the Blood-houndis of ye
-traytour Lorne, ye whythe had followed him even from ye up gettynge of
-ye sun, and beyinge come unto ane small rivere, did straighte enter therynne,
-and in such mannerre pursue his flyghte, so that ye living waterres washynge
-clean awaye ye scente of his footsteppes, the blood-houndis were at
-faulte, and ye traytour Lorne was baffled for that tymme. Thus did ye
-Kynge escape aue great dangere.”</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>‘Fool as I was,’ I exclaimed, ‘not to have thought of
-the Bruce and Macdougall of Lorne before!’ With new
-life and vigour, I pressed forward in the direction of the
-waterfall. The noise came every instant louder and
-louder upon my ear; and in a short space, I had burst
-my way down a steep bank, and to the edge of a deep
-pool, or cauldron, into which a large rivulet came thundering
-and foaming down, through a deep chasm in the
-rocks above. I had little time to admire the loveliness of
-the cataract; but rushing to the outlet of the pool, I saw
-that the stream went dancing down a pebbly bed,
-intersected here and there with low veins and ledges of
-rocks, like weirs, over which the bright water flashed and
-foamed right merrily. So, with a cry of joy, I bounded
-into the stream, and began rapidly to splash my way
-downwards, running with almost frantic haste, sometimes
-slipping and stumbling over the smooth slimy stones,
-sometimes floundering into a deepish pool, scaring the
-fish, which flew gleaming away, like wedges of burnished
-metal, to seek shelter under the ledges of rock, or amongst
-the twisted roots of trees upon the bank, among which
-the water frothed and gurgled.</p>
-
-<p>‘My great and fervent benison be upon water,’ I
-cried to myself. ‘It hath ever been my home, and now
-is it my refuge and my safety. Thanks, thanks, good
-secret-keeping stream! Amid the merry music of thy
-murmur, thou wilt never prate the whereabouts of the
-poor flying mariner. Rush speedily on with me, fair and
-living waters, sweeping my track fast downwards to the
-sea!’</p>
-
-<p>With such-like rhapsodies, I relieved the fulness of my
-heart, as I followed the stream, splashing down in its<span class="pagenum" id="Page_256">[Pg 256]</span>
-very centre. Sometimes when a small waterfall interrupted
-its course, I had to scramble ashore and make a
-brief circuit, but I soon took to the water again. In
-about ten minutes after I had first entered the river, the
-bay of the bloodhound ceased to be heard; but I distinguished
-the sound of a clearly-blown horn or trumpet,
-and the report of one or two guns, as though one party
-were making signals to another. Still I pressed on, but
-more cautiously—watching the banks very narrowly, and
-at the places where the stream flowed silently, pausing to
-listen with all my ears. There was no alarm, and I
-began to grow very confident, when all at once it
-occurred to me, as I glanced at the point of the horizon
-to which the sun was now hastening, that I must be
-rapidly returning either to Carthagena, or to some point
-very near it, upon the coast, where, undoubtedly, this
-rivulet emptied itself into the sea. This consideration at
-once arrested my footsteps; and creeping among the
-roots of a tree, beneath an overhanging bank, I began to
-muse upon what was best to be done. I did not doubt
-but that my pursuers had fairly lost my traces, and that
-it would be a hard matter for them again to find the
-scent. Indeed I considered that I might very safely
-leave the water, and pursue my original westward route
-amongst the woods; but then I was unarmed, excepting
-my knife, and without even the means of lighting a fire
-how was I to live among the forests and the wildernesses
-which stretched backward from the coast? As I mused,
-a thought struck me. When first captured by the
-Spaniards, I had several double doubloons, and a few
-pieces of eight about me. This money I had been
-careful to preserve, and possessed it still, save one of the
-doubloons, which I had given to my jailer, as he bade me
-adieu. Why, then, thought I, should I not return to
-Carthagena as soon as the night falls, and endeavour to
-purchase fairly what I want? I speak Spanish sufficiently
-well. I am dressed like a Spanish sailor. Why should I
-not, by a circuitous path, reach the seaward part of the
-city, and making believe that I have landed from a vessel<span class="pagenum" id="Page_257">[Pg 257]</span>
-in the bay, purchase what arms and ammunition I require,
-not forgetting some food, and so leaving the town again
-in the darkness, pursue my way westward? The more I
-thought of this scheme, the more feasible did it appear.
-To be sure, there was a risk of being taken, and perhaps
-hung; but if I plunged unarmed into the woods, I had at
-least the certainty of dying a lingering death by starvation,
-or of being murdered by the savages. Therefore,
-without much ado, I decided upon braving the immediate
-danger, and purchasing what I wanted in the town, from
-which I had so recently fled. With this design, I began
-again to wade slowly down the river, thinking to myself
-that if any one noticed the wet state of my garments, I
-might easily account for it, by saying that I had but just
-now landed in a small boat through the surf. My
-progress was of course but slow; and several huts being
-built upon the banks of the stream, I was obliged now
-and then to leave the water and take circuits round about,
-keeping as much as possible in the shadow of the woods.
-I met, however, with no interruption; and so, in about
-the space of an hour and a half or thereby, I heard the
-sound of the surf. On gaining the coast I found it to
-consist of considerable sand-hills, with many small bays,
-and lines of breakers extending several cable-lengths from
-the shore. The weather being moderate, however, the
-surf was not violent. My first act was to creep to the
-top of one of the highest sand-hills, and look anxiously to
-seaward. There were the sails of one or two fishing-boats,
-and as many coasting craft of small burden in
-sight, but nothing like our schooner; so I descended and
-began to move to the eastward. Before I had taken
-many steps, however, I recollected that Carthagena was
-fortified at its seaward extremities, and I asked myself
-whether I could safely attempt to pass through the line
-of defences. The countersign I knew, but it might have
-been changed since my escape, or perhaps it only applied
-to the guard of the alcaide’s house. While I was thus
-debating the matter with myself, I suddenly saw floating
-in the shallow water near the mouth of the small river a<span class="pagenum" id="Page_258">[Pg 258]</span>
-small boat or canoe, bottom upward, and, running hastily
-towards her, found her to be no other than the negro
-fisherman’s canoe, which we had upset the night of our
-unfortunate reconnoitring expedition. I straightway
-determined to turn this piece of luck to account, and,
-instead of proceeding by land, to paddle round and
-disembark in any quiet corner of the bay. On righting
-the canoe, I found she was but little damaged, and the
-paddles having been secured by pieces of spun yarn, as is
-usual in the boats of fishermen, were both ready for use.
-Therefore, without more ado, I got into the boat and
-pulled her off to sea. There were not less than three bars
-formed by the sea at the mouth of the stream, and the
-breakers burst white upon them all. However, by
-watching my time, and carefully attending to the run of
-the seas, I got over the inner two very easily. On the
-outward bank the surf broke heavier, and once or twice I
-expected to have had to swim for it. However, I had better
-luck, the canoe was very lively, and danced like a cork on
-the broken seas, so that at length I fairly made the
-smooth swell, with a boat, however, half full of water.
-After baling her out I began slowly to paddle eastward,
-the boat being impelled by the dying powers of the sea
-breeze, and presently, just as the sun was dipping, I
-opened the bay of Carthagena, and seeing an old slimy
-wooden jetty, only used apparently by a few fishermen, I
-made for it. Truly, says that brave man, (and also as
-brave a penman,) whom afterwards I well knew, William
-Dampier, ‘Carthagena is a fair city open to the sea.’
-The level beams of the setting sun glowed upon the
-heaving water, and upon the great Spanish ships, lying
-like piled castles, with high forecastles and carved and
-galleried poops, slowly rocking to the solemn moving
-seas; and shorewards, upon the bright line of gaily-painted
-houses, with verandahs and balconies all fluttering
-with tinted draperies; and the pinnacles of churches and
-convents, from whence the evening bells came pealing out
-into the rich glowing air. One or two small fishing-craft
-were slowly making for the beach, and a canoe or two<span class="pagenum" id="Page_259">[Pg 259]</span>
-would now and then glide between the shipping and the
-shore; but to my great comfort no one seemed to pay the
-slightest attention to my humble self. Therefore, I made
-fast the canoe to the jetty whereof I spoke, and which was
-all hung with nets put there to dry, and walked, the
-more boldly as it was now grey dusk, into the city,
-looking for some shop or store where I might be served
-with the articles which I needed. The traders and
-merchants were now beginning to close their warehouses,
-and so it behoved me quickly to find a suitable shop.
-The streets in which I wandered being very narrow and
-high, were all but dark; lights gleamed out of the houses,
-shadowy figures moved upon balconies, and grave men
-with long cloaks stood by doorways, talking in their
-sonorous tongue, and smoking great pipes of tobacco.
-Still no one took notice of me, and I was the more
-assured, inasmuch as I saw around me many seamen
-dressed as I was myself, one or two of whom hailed me
-‘comrade,’ and would have taken me to be treated at the
-Posada. I moved, however, with a quick stealthy step,
-keeping my eyes warily abroad, and at length, in a small
-street or lane, found a low-roofed shop, or rather stall,
-quite open to the thoroughfare, in which, in the middle of
-a collection of fire-arms, and steel weapons of many kinds,
-sat an old, hook-nosed, grey-headed man, with a very
-dirty face and great iron spectacles, drinking a bowl of
-savoury cocoa, and at the same time dictating to a little
-lad, dressed in a thread-bare fashion, some bills of charges
-which the boy was writing in a great greasy account-book,
-by the light of a single candle, which flared and
-flickered in the open shop. The old merchant I concluded
-to be a Jew, and judged that so long as I paid a good
-price for what I wanted, I would be asked no questions
-which it might be inconvenient to answer. I, therefore,
-entered the shop, and was about to speak, when the Jew,
-who had not perceived me, suddenly raised his voice,
-and, addressing some one whom I had not seen by
-reason of a pillar which supported the roof of the shop,
-said—</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_260">[Pg 260]</span></p>
-
-<p>‘Not a pistole—not a maravedi! Father of Abraham!
-I think it is a robber thou art. Here be your last bills
-of exchange, for which I advanced thee money, returned
-dishonoured by the goldsmith at Cadiz. Go thy ways—go
-thy ways; thou shalt have no gold here!’</p>
-
-<p>Upon this discouraging address, a man in military
-attire rose grumbling from a chest upon which he had
-been sitting, and at the same time making as though he
-would draw his weapon on the merchant. But the latter
-seemed little to heed this motion.</p>
-
-<p>‘Take thy lantern, Moses,’ he said to the boy, ‘and
-light out this honourable cavalier, who hath found at last
-that impertinent importunity doth not always unbutton a
-man’s pouches.’</p>
-
-<p>The lad stepped with his light towards the spot where
-I stood, and the would-be borrower following him, still
-muttering and threatening the Jew with all sorts of
-vengeance as an unbelieving hound, who would trample
-on the holy Cross—the latter cried out, ‘Hold up thy
-lamp, Moses, and give the cavalier light enough to
-swear by.’</p>
-
-<p>The boy waved his lantern with a grin, and the light
-flashing on the soldier, I recognised in an instant the
-flushed and gross features of the Captain Guzman,
-noways improved in expression by the little scene in
-which he had no doubt been an actor. The recognition
-was, unfortunately, mutual, for just as I recoiled back
-into the shadow so as to allow him to pass, he roared
-out—</p>
-
-<p>‘Holy mother! the English dog of a pirate, who
-escaped to-day, after half-throttling the alcaide’s clerk!’
-And with these words, he pounced upon me; but I was
-prepared, and striking him a blow in the face, which, I
-hope, showed him every star in heaven, and a few additional
-ones besides, dancing before his eyes, I closed on him,
-and hurled him back into the shop, upsetting the Jew boy
-with a crash over a pile of casks and bales, and immediately
-extinguishing the light. Having paid this last attention
-to my friend, who was so sure that I would come to the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_261">[Pg 261]</span>
-gallows with all speed, I took to my heels incontinently,
-running at random. But Guzman, although overthrown,
-was not stunned, and continued to bawl out clamorously,
-to catch, or shoot, or stab the English pirate. The alarm
-was very quickly taken up, and the whole street was in a
-commotion. However, as every one was running about
-in the dusk, which already approached to darkness, as
-well as myself, and as I shouted to secure the English
-cutthroat as lustily as ever a Spaniard of them all, I was
-more inclined to laugh than to be much alarmed at my
-mischance, when a pestilent fellow, who had run out of a
-house in his shirt-sleeves, grasped me by the arm, and
-earnestly besought me to tell him where the heretic was.
-I replied that I had seen the rascal running down a
-certain lane, to which I pointed, when the man, turning
-short round upon me, and having most likely a good ear
-for his own language, asked me, very abruptly, from what
-part of Spain I came. For all reply, I made an effort,
-shook him clean off, and darted away. But the fellow
-was as nimble as I was; he was at my heels in a trice,
-shouting at the same time at the top of his voice, and
-pointing me out to others as we ran. We had a hard
-race of it. Half-a-dozen times I was grappled by willing
-hands, but my impetus in running enabled me again and
-again to burst away, while, to distract attention, I
-shouted and pointed ahead just as did my pursuers. All
-this, the reader must conceive, passed with breathless
-rapidity. It was a confused scene—narrow, gloomy
-streets, all sparkling with lights as people rushed to
-doors and balconies, and echoing to the clamour of voices
-and the tramp of footsteps, as the shouting crowd ran
-wildly, jostling and tripping each other, and many of
-them swearing that the English pirates had returned to
-the attack, and that there was nothing but pillage and
-murder for Carthagena. Howbeit, in the midst of all
-this confusion, I could not but be sensible that the man
-in the shirt-sleeves and his original comrades had not lost
-sight of me for an instant. Therefore I put forth my
-utmost speed; plunged from street to street and lane to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_262">[Pg 262]</span>
-lane, fearing every moment that I would run into what
-the French call a <em>cul-de-sac</em>; and, indeed, at length, as I
-emerged from a confused cluster of narrow, winding
-streets into a more open way lined with high walls, along
-which I ran, almost spent with toil, and panting for
-breath, I heard a great shout of triumph behind me, as
-though I was at length trapped, and looking narrowly
-ahead, I saw a high wall with iron trellis-work at the
-top, and over which ran the branches of trees, barring all
-passage. I was close to the obstacle before I saw it in
-the dusk, and at the same instant I became sensible of a
-small wicket-door, which, before I had time to think,
-opened, and the forms of two ladies, dressed in black,
-veiled and hooded, with lace and silk capes, stood
-before me.</p>
-
-<p>Hardly knowing what I did, I flung myself on my
-knees upon the ground. They started back, and the
-younger, as I judged, uttered a slight scream.</p>
-
-<p>‘Ladies,’ I gasped out, ‘I am an unfortunate Scots
-sailor; your countrymen pursue me to kill me. Gentle
-ladies, save my life!’</p>
-
-<p>Just as I said this the footsteps of the Spaniards echoed
-between the high walls.</p>
-
-<p>‘Where is the English rascal?’ they cried; ‘he shall
-die the death!’</p>
-
-<p>After a single whispered word, hastily passed between
-them, one of the ladies bent towards me, started back,
-came forwards again, and said in my ear, in a timid, fluttering
-voice:</p>
-
-<p>‘Rise, young man; and pass in.’</p>
-
-<p>I sprang up and rushed through the wicket, which
-the ladies closed again from the outside; then, couching
-breathlessly by the door, I listened. In a moment I heard
-the gruff voices of my pursuers, evidently asking the
-ladies whether they had seen me. What answer was returned
-I could only guess at, from hearing the disappointed
-exclamations and the retiring footsteps of the
-Spaniards. Then I fell upon my knees, and called God
-to bless the kind hearts which had saved a flying man<span class="pagenum" id="Page_263">[Pg 263]</span>
-from his deadly foes. I was in a garden. The high wall
-seemed to shut out the clamour of my pursuers, which
-had, however, doubtless, died away, as the search seemed
-to be unsuccessful. Around me were rich trees and
-shrubs, and gaudy flowers. Fresh from the tumult of a
-street scuffle, how peaceful a spot it seemed! The fireflies
-shot amid the bushes like sparks from anvils. The
-hum of the wings of night insects sounded like the low
-breathing of Nature sleeping. The cooling dews fell
-balm-like upon my hot, wet forehead. I sank back, leaning
-against the wall, exhausted and utterly worn by the
-excitement, the pain, and the great fatigue of the day.
-I felt, even before I had been ten minutes couched amid
-the sweet smelling and clustering shrubs, a sweet lethargy
-come over me, and stretching my overwrought limbs
-among the herbage, I fairly fell into a deep, calm sleep.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="r10">
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XXII">CHAPTER XXII.<br><br>
-<span class="fs80">THE FAMILY OF THE SPANISH MERCHANT.</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p>I was wakened by some one flashing a lantern in my face,
-and hastily starting to my feet, for I feared that I might
-have been discovered, I found myself standing beside a
-personage well-stricken in years, of grave but pleasant
-aspect, and soberly clad, as one of those old decent serving
-men, who become, as it were, members of the family on
-whom they attend.</p>
-
-<p>‘Fear for nothing, young man,’ said the servitor,
-seeing, I suppose, the momentary flurry and tremor in
-which I was; ‘you are in a very secure asylum. My good
-mistress, whom heaven preserve! is known for her charity,
-and the Virgin directed the steps which led you here to-night.’</p>
-
-<p>This discourse, you may be sure, was very pleasant to
-me; and while I was blessing my stars for my good luck,
-the old man, who was sufficiently garrulous, went on
-praising his mistress and the Virgin alternately, so that
-it became difficult to determine which he held in the
-greatest respect.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_264">[Pg 264]</span></p>
-
-<p>‘Not a lady is there, either in Old Spain or in New—the
-saints be blessed for it! who hath even a tithe of my
-mistress’s virtues. So was it indeed with her father
-before her, and so will it be with her daughter after her;
-for I have well-known all three—albeit my young mistress
-is not yet turned of seventeen. Notwithstanding,
-however, she is already a most dainty and brave lady; her
-equal not being to be found in any city or colony in the
-Main, for which I bless the saints, and particularly Saint
-Gieronimo, who is indeed my mistress’s patron saint, and
-would be mine also, were it not that I would not venture to
-intrude upon his holy notice my poor concerns, his attention
-being no doubt, fully taken up with those of my
-betters.’</p>
-
-<p>Running on in this random way, the old man led me,
-while he talked, through the garden towards the house.
-It was his lady’s pleasure, he said, that I should eat a
-good supper, repose me in a good bed, and that I should
-to-morrow be introduced to herself and her daughter,
-they having, however, as I learned much to my surprise,
-already been made acquainted with some portions of my
-story, and longing to know the rest. As we spoke thus,
-we entered a wing of a handsome mansion, pillared and
-porticoed all round, and having a flat roof, whereon were
-set pots and tubs containing delicate flowering shrubs.
-We traversed divers passages, through which the fresh
-night air freely penetrated, and I could not but admire
-the delicate carving of the polished wood which formed
-the wainscoting of the walls. At length we entered a
-pleasant chamber, where was a bed, and a table well laid
-out for supper. You may imagine that I played a very
-good knife and fork, and the old steward or intendant, or
-whatever he was, bore me company with rare good will.
-After supper, we drank some of the most delicious wine
-to which I ever put my lips; and then, in answer to my
-earnest entreaties, my companion informed me of the
-name and quality of my preservers and hosts.</p>
-
-<p>‘You are not to suppose, Master Mariner,’ quoth he,
-‘that you are in the mansion of a grandee of Spain. Because,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_265">[Pg 265]</span>
-for many generations, the family of the late Bartholomew
-Moranté were merchants, having great possessions
-both in Old and New Spain, at Alicant, upon the
-Mediterranean Sea, and on this side the ocean, at Havanna
-in Cuba, and here at Carthagena. Now, the wealth
-of Señor Bartholomew, my late master, who is with the
-saints, was so exceeding, that the king would have made
-him a noble, but to this dignity Señor Bartholomew did
-not in any way aspire. The first part of his life was very
-fortunate; not a galley, not a caravel sent he out, but it
-returned to him with the venture increased manyfold.
-But as he waxed old, the saints, doubtless having a mind
-to try his faith, it was so ordered that he experienced
-many crosses and losses, in such wise indeed that he left
-Alicant, not having any longer the means to keep up the
-brave state he had formerly supported, and came hither,
-and settled in this house at Carthagena. But his ill-fortune—praise
-to the saints, who, doubtless, took great
-interest in my late master, seeing that they were pleased
-thus to afflict him!—his ill-fortune, I say, following him,
-he was obliged to send away his agents at the Havanna,
-and at length, his greatest bark, richly freighted, being
-taken at sea, and all on board of her killed or sold into
-slavery, by a French devil incarnate, whom they call
-Montbars, and whom may heaven, in its mercy, cause
-to be eternally tormented—my good master took to
-his bed, and we weeping all around him, and blessing the
-saints, who, without doubt, had thus broken his heart,
-in order that they might take him to themselves, the
-worthy Bartholomew Moranté departed this life to enter
-into a better world where are neither spoilers nor stealers,
-nor doth there happen any manner of trouble or cross.
-His widow, whom still I serve, dwells here in this house,
-and places great confidence in me, looking up, although I
-say it, to my advice and counsels; for I am old in the
-world, and have seen much appertaining to domestic service,
-and am also much enlightened in visions by the holy
-saints, who are pleased to make my hours of sleep as
-profitable to my good patroness as my times of waking.’</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_266">[Pg 266]</span></p>
-
-<p>From this rambling discourse of the old gentleman, I
-saw plainly of what kidney he was—to wit, a very honest-hearted
-simpleton, who loved his mistress dearly, while
-she, if her steward spoke sooth, was probably as simple-minded
-as himself. But, desiring to know somewhat of
-the young lady, the serving-man broke out into raptures
-concerning her innocence and her beauty.</p>
-
-<p>‘Her name,’ quoth he, ‘thanks to the saints! is Joseffa—Joseffa
-Moranté—a rare brave name for a rare brave
-damsel. But she will change it sometime, mayhap.
-Nay, very soon—if all go right, and the saints will it.’</p>
-
-<p>So saying, the old fellow began to smirk and nod, and
-look as wise and as sly as he could, and then fell to chuckling
-to himself.</p>
-
-<p>‘The rarest match,’ he presently commenced again.
-‘Her mother, having as I said great confidence in me,
-consulted with me on the matter. “Martin y Vesdras,”
-says she to me, “Joseffa is marriageable; and here hath
-come a suitor well-favoured and marvellously well-recommended,
-and a nobleman to boot. Thou wilt do well,
-Martin, to see him; nay, hold converse with him, and
-report to me your opinion.”</p>
-
-<p>‘But I, having no opinions save what the saints send
-me, went straight to bed and dreamed upon the matter.
-Never had I a more encouraging vision. Good Master
-Mariner, as I am a true man, St. Gieronimo himself appeared
-at the foot of the bed, holding a wedding ring,
-which he seemed to throw towards me with a very
-pleasant smile, and so when I woke I actually found the
-symbol upon the coverlid.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Truly,’ says I, ’ Martin, this was but little short of a
-miracle.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Master Mariner,’ quoth the simpleton, ‘I rejoice to
-hear you say so. So indeed think I, and so thinks my
-mistress, only——’</p>
-
-<p>‘What,’ cries I, ‘does any one refuse to believe the
-token?’</p>
-
-<p>‘Ay, verily,’ answered the old steward, ‘even Mistress
-Joseffa herself, who is in noways inclined, at the present<span class="pagenum" id="Page_267">[Pg 267]</span>
-time at least, to this wedding, and so she contends, half
-in mirth half in pretty pettishness—the saints guard her!—that
-the ring is not a marriage ring, but truly only one
-of the brass curtain rings which she sayeth dropped upon
-my nose in the night, and gave me my dream. “Look
-you, Martin,” says she, “the ring is plain, just like the
-other curtain rings.”</p>
-
-<p>‘“But look you again, Mistress Joseffa,” says I, “all
-wedding rings are plain, just like this ring.”</p>
-
-<p>‘But she, sir, in noways put down by my argument,
-answers, “Truly, but wedding rings are also gold, and
-this is brass, Master Martin.”’</p>
-
-<p>‘Well,’ says I, ‘how did you answer that consideration?
-Methought, it pushed you home.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Answer it,’ cried he, ‘I hope I know better than to
-dispute obstinately with the daughter of my good mistress.
-No, Master Mariner, I held my peace, as became
-me, being but a servant; yet I do, nevertheless, steadfastly
-believe the vision, and I hope that the saints will
-inspire the sweet Joseffa with kinder thoughts to her
-suitor, who is truly a goodly man and an honest, and
-what is better than both, favoured of St. Gieronimo.’</p>
-
-<p>Then I, making inquiries of the steward as to the
-young lady’s features and carriage, he answered that to-morrow
-my own eyes would inform me better than his
-tongue, which could in no way do justice to such a theme
-as the great virtues and loveliness of his charming young
-mistress, whose single fault was that she laughed at the
-wedding ring of St. Gieronimo. Soon after this, our conversation
-broke off, the steward telling me he would be
-with me betimes in the morning. I lay long awake that
-night, conjuring up visions of Joseffa; at length, as sleep
-was coming over me, I heard, or dreamed I heard, the
-low tinkle of a guitar, and a manly voice, as of a serenader
-singing to it beneath an outside balcony.</p>
-
-<p>‘The favoured suitor,’ I murmured, half asleep; and
-forthwith began to dream that I was his rival, and that
-Saint Gieronimo appeared again to explain that he meant
-the wedding ring with a view to my coming, and that<span class="pagenum" id="Page_268">[Pg 268]</span>
-Martin’s interpretation of the vision was quite erroneous.</p>
-
-<p>The morning came, and I was ushered into the presence
-of my most kind benefactors. They sat—the elder
-lady on a couch, the younger on a footstool at her feet—in
-a great lofty withdrawing-chamber, the walls and
-ceiling rarely carved, the floor of sweet-smelling wood,
-highly polished, and almost as slippery as ice, and the
-whole apartment darkened by blinds of a peculiar construction,
-which excluded the heat, but allowed the fresh
-breeze to pass in freely. As I advanced, the Señora
-Moranté held out her jewelled hand, which I kissed very
-respectfully. She was a tall, stately-looking dame, dressed
-in morning-robes, and her hair, which was beginning to
-turn grey, covered with festoons of black lace, gracefully
-arranged, and falling down upon her shoulders. But my
-eyes were, as the reader may guess, fixed with a far more
-delighted gaze upon Joseffa. She was, indeed, a beauty
-of the true Spanish mould. Her form vibrated, as it
-were, with a graceful suppleness which made her every
-movement a charm to see. Her oval face—lighted by
-eyes which alternately flashed and melted—was beaming,
-sometimes with the joyous rapture of gaily flushing
-spirits, sometimes, as it were, shaded by a grave expression
-of pretty coquettish modesty and bashfulness. Her
-lips were full and pouting, and every moment there came
-a merry smile upon them, with a sudden arching of her
-dark eyebrows, which quite enabled me to understand
-the sportive nature which laughed at poor Martin, with
-his ring of St. Grieronimo. She bowed slightly as I advanced,
-and then, flirting and twirling and shaking a
-fan made of gaily-coloured feathers before her face, stole
-rapid glances at me; all the while pouting her lips, and
-sometimes looking down to the ground, and then starting
-up, and whispering and laughing softly in her mother’s
-ear, or unto herself, playing all the while with one hand
-among her long black hair—her white fingers glancing
-nimbly amid the glossy clustering locks.</p>
-
-<p>The señora received me with a sort of goodnatured<span class="pagenum" id="Page_269">[Pg 269]</span>
-dignity, and bade me sit on a low seat hard by. She
-then began to inspect me, as I thought, as curiously as
-though I had been some sort of strange animal, muttering
-to herself, and sometimes whispering her daughter; to
-my no small embarrassment; all at once, she said—</p>
-
-<p>‘Young man, I fear me you are a heretic?’</p>
-
-<p>I replied softly that I was of the religion of my fathers.</p>
-
-<p>‘But you are a pirate,’ she commenced again; ‘and
-you put our people to death very cruelly, and you pillage
-our ships. See, what being a heretic leads you to. Perhaps
-it was very weak in me to save you, and I know not
-what father Anselmo will say when next I go to confession.’</p>
-
-<p>I answered that, far away in Scotland I had a mother,
-who I was sure would do for any poor hunted Spaniard
-what she had done for me, and that, though we did not
-worship in the same fashion, yet that never would my
-mother forget in her prayers the kind heart that had
-saved her son.’</p>
-
-<p>I spoke this very earnestly, for I felt what I said
-deeply, and kneeling down, I took the señora’s hand
-again, and kissed it. She paused a little time, and then
-asked, what made my countrymen and the French so
-vengeful against the Spaniards. Now, this was an argument
-which I had no will to enter into—seeing that such
-a debate could but breed angry feelings on both sides;
-and so I endeavoured to turn the matter off by saying,
-that it was the two nations, and not individuals, who
-made war—on account of the heritage of the new world.</p>
-
-<p>‘But, señor,’ said Joseffa, and all my nerves tingled as
-I heard her voice, ‘you are of a very cruel and vindictive
-nation; for when my poor father’s great bark, the Trinidada,
-was taken, all the sailors were struck down and
-murdered upon the deck.’</p>
-
-<p>To this I answered, that I understood that the Trinidada
-had been captured by Louis Montbars, a Frenchman;
-that I had myself been prisoner in the hands of
-that captain; and that it was only by a dangerous flight
-that I escaped being sold into slavery by him in the isle
-of Tortugas.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_270">[Pg 270]</span></p>
-
-<p>This revelation all at once seemed to alter the position
-in which I stood in the favour of the ladies, who, up to
-that time, although they had, as I understood, received a
-good report—but from whence I could not guess—of my
-conduct before the alcaide—were yet partly prepossessed
-against me, as a heretic and a pirate of that class which
-had brought so much desolation on their house. So,
-presently, they desired to hear somewhat of my adventures,
-which I told them very faithfully—the narration
-occupying the greatest portion of the day. While I sat
-speaking, my eyes often encountered the dark orbs of
-Joseffa fixed on mine. Then would we both drop our
-glances to the ground, and my voice, despite myself,
-would falter, and a red blush would spring over the bright
-olive cheeks of the young Spanish lady, and her feather-fan
-would flutter more violently than before.</p>
-
-<p>That day I dined with my hosts. In the cool of the
-evening I walked with them in the garden; but at the
-board, and beneath the orange-trees, I saw but one face
-and one form. In my sleep the star-like eyes of Joseffa
-haunted me; her voice rang unceasingly in my brain.
-When I ventured to take her hand, mine trembled as
-though I were a palsied old man—when she left me, the
-salt of existence seemed to have lost its savour. I went
-and came musing. I took no pleasure in aught save what
-related to her. In short, I had fallen certain fathoms
-deep in love.</p>
-
-<p>And, verily, it was not wonderful. I lived in a state
-of existence so new, that it seemed to me, then, and
-seems to me still, a Dreamland—a long, sweet unreal
-vision. Consider what I was—a rude mariner, ever-brought
-up in the coarse company of rough and unpolished
-men, with hands fit to swing a lead-line, or tie
-a reef-point; with a voice good for hailing the fore-top
-in a gale of wind; but with neither hands nor voice
-trained for the soft requirements of a lady’s bower.</p>
-
-<p>I laugh, with a melancholy mirth, now, when I think
-of what my uncouthness must have been. Here was I a
-rough and round sailor—a fellow who had been kicked<span class="pagenum" id="Page_271">[Pg 271]</span>
-about in Scotch brigs, and buccaneering small craft all
-my days—to whose tongue the lingo of the forecastle
-came as my mother-speech; who had hardly slept but in
-a swinging hammock—ate but of lobscouse and sea-pie—sang
-but roaring sea-ballads, or thought but of storms
-and calms, and ships and rigs, with now and then a
-waking dream of old boyish days, of the Royal Thistle
-and the Balwearie Burn, or mayhap the memory of an
-ancient Scots legend, or a warm gush of feeling when I
-pondered on my old mother, by the ingle-nook in the
-fisher’s cottage, near Kirkleslie Pier. Such was I then,
-such my very nature, body and soul, and yet now did I
-find myself the lover of a gentle Spanish lady, walking
-with her through garden bowers, communing with her
-under shady verandahs, talking of things I hardly dreamt
-of even as lurking in the bottom of my soul. And she
-neither jeered at my port, nor flouted my rough speech.
-She loved to hear of my country, and when I told her
-our gallant tales of the Bruce, of how he was crowned
-King of Scotland, crowned not in an abbey, by no holy
-hand of priest, and without the ancient symbol of the
-sovereignty of the realm, but in a wilderness, with a
-circlet of gold hastily wrought out, and by the hands of a
-famous heroine, dear to the heart and memory of a Scot,
-for ever—the Countess of Marr—when, I say, I told
-such tales, Joseffa would hang, as it were, upon my lips,
-and then saying that Spain also had its great heroes and
-mighty men of old, would draw her fingers strongly
-across the thrilling strings of her guitar, and with flashing
-eye and widened nostril, sing the glorious ballads of
-her nation, of the battles between the Spanish chivalry
-and the Paynim Moors, of the conquest of Alhama, and
-the life and death of Diaz de Bivar, the peerless Cid.</p>
-
-<p>And so flew weeks away. I know not to this day how
-the Señora Moranté observed not what was passing in
-our minds. She had taken me into great favour, and
-consulted me much upon family matters, and upon her
-design to cross the ocean and return to Alicant; and
-often she hinted mysteriously at the noble husband her<span class="pagenum" id="Page_272">[Pg 272]</span>
-daughter would espouse after her return to Spain. This
-suitor I knew to be in Carthagena, I knew he ofttimes
-visited the house. Yet, upon these occasions, the mother
-managed somehow adroitly to receive him when I was not
-by. From Joseffa I could learn but this, that the gallant
-favoured by her mother was not loved by her; that she
-received him but to humour the fancies of her parent,
-who was but a weak, though good kind of woman; and
-finally, she said to me, in low tones, for her eyes were
-looking closely into mine, and her breath was warm upon
-my cheek,</p>
-
-<p>‘Do not regard him—Leonard, my own sailor, I will
-marry only you.’</p>
-
-<p>But a week before these sweet words were spoken, we
-had (the custom is of Scotland) broken together a crooked
-coin. Joseffa wore one half of it attached by a braid
-round her neck and next to her heart, and I wore the
-other.</p>
-
-<p>So, as I have said, weeks flew by; sometimes I thought
-sadly of my comrades, and wondered upon what seas the
-gallant Will-o’-the-Wisp was sailing; but these were
-only passing moments. My life was a long sweet dream,
-checkered only by such considerations as I have mentioned,
-and by doubtings and misgivings touching the
-strange suitor who persecuted Joseffa with his importunities.</p>
-
-<p>‘Tell me but his name,’ I would say; ‘bring me but
-face to face with him; I ask no more.’</p>
-
-<p>But she would reply, ‘Be tranquil, Leonard! You
-have my heart. My mother loves me well, and it pleases
-her to nurse herself in fancies which can never turn
-to reality. Before you arrived here, a ship sailed hence to
-Spain; she must be now upon the ocean again, with her
-bows hitherward. When that ship sails a second time, I
-trust well that my mother’s eyes will be opened, and that
-what is now passing will be remembered but as an idle
-cloud, which hath come and gone.’</p>
-
-<p>But I was not satisfied. And so I applied very earnestly
-to Martin, professing to consult him as to a vision<span class="pagenum" id="Page_273">[Pg 273]</span>
-with which the saints had blessed me, touching the wedding
-favoured of St. Gieronimo. All I could obtain from
-the old man was, that the cavalier, for certain private
-reasons, wished that his visits should be kept secret until
-the nuptials had actually been arranged.</p>
-
-<p>Now, all this appeared to me a most strange and needless
-complication of a simple matter, and, calling to mind
-certain words of Joseffa, I could not help wondering whether
-the cavalier held the same language to the mother
-as to the daughter. The allusions to the persecution
-which Joseffa was undoubtedly undergoing, out of deference
-to her mother’s foibles and prejudices, coming probably
-to an end when a certain vessel sailed for Spain,
-would seem to imply that in that vessel would also sail
-her tormentor; and, pondering upon this circumstance,
-a thought suddenly flashed upon me, which made me certain
-I had caught a clue to the mystery. As all this came
-up into my mind, my brow flushed and my blood boiled.</p>
-
-<p>‘Come what may of it,’ I swore, ‘the next time that
-this man crosses the threshold, ’tis I who will receive
-him.’ I hided my time warily and well. I watched; I
-lay in wait; not a motion of the old steward or of the
-señora but I followed; and the next day I had my will.
-I knew the mysterious suitor was in the house. I knew
-that the señora had gone to summon her daughter, who,
-I also knew, would be long of coming. Therefore,
-gathering up body and soul for the interview, as I had
-done once before for the torture, I burst hurriedly into
-the withdrawing room, and saw there, dangling his bonnet
-and playing with his sword-knot, the man I had expected
-to see—Don José!</p>
-
-<p>Making a great effort, I composed myself, and stood
-firm, looking at him, but not daring to allow my tongue
-to utter a sound. On his side, Don José showed not the
-slightest emotion, only a dark shadow seemed for a moment
-to pass over his face, but it went almost as soon as
-it had come; and then, stepping up to me, he said, in
-such a frank, open fashion, that I could hardly believe
-my ears:</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_274">[Pg 274]</span></p>
-
-<p>‘Hey, my old friend, the Scots Mariner! I am
-heartily glad to see thee again. I knew that thou hadst
-found refuge in this very hospitable mansion. And so,
-friend, thou hast doubled both upon blood-hound and alcaide.
-It was very well done, man. I gave thee a good
-character to the Señora Moranté, and I hope it hath
-availed thee. But indeed the ladies lately told me, that
-thou wert still here, behaving thyself most reasonably,
-for a pirate and a heretic—nay, that, in sooth, thou wert
-getting to be quite a favourite. A rare time for thee,
-Friend Buccaneer. How wilt thou like sea-fare and sea-company,
-after such an interlude?’</p>
-
-<p>‘Don José,’ said I, speaking in a low and tremulous
-voice, for very passion; ‘it were best that you leave this
-house.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Truly, friend,’ replied the cavalier—‘you are the
-least hospitable person within it. What may be the
-meaning, I pray, of a recommendation, which, in thy
-mouth, I find somewhat singular?’</p>
-
-<p>‘Don José,’ I replied, ‘you have saved my life. It is
-now in your hands again. I am a rough, untutored mariner,
-not skilled in your courtly ironical phrase,—I say
-again, you must leave this house, or I will drive you from
-it—you may return with officers and alguazils, but at any
-rate, you will not return in the character which now you
-falsely pretend to.’</p>
-
-<p>‘My good man,’ said Don José, still playing with his
-sword-knot, and, as he spoke, flinging himself on a sofa,
-and dangling his legs gracefully—‘My good man, have
-you ever, in the course of your buccaneering, come
-across a cut on the forehead from a well wielded piece of
-steel? Because if so, at certain seasons, the brain may
-still feel the smart. You ought to purge and bleed—my
-good pirate,—purge and bleed.’</p>
-
-<p>I was likely to lose my senses in reality at this cool
-effrontery, and so, going up close to the Spanish nobleman,
-I said—</p>
-
-<p>‘Remember, Don Ottavio y St. Jago, who is known to
-every duenna at the Court of Madrid—remember, your<span class="pagenum" id="Page_275">[Pg 275]</span>
-mutual bargain, and the message which you sent your
-friend by the mouth of Señor Davosa, a merchant, who
-has doubtless by this time sailed for Old Spain, on board
-of the galleon.’</p>
-
-<p>Don José started to his feet, as though a cannon-shot
-had been fired close to his ear. His tawny features were
-flushed with a sudden redness, and as he jumped up erect
-upon the floor, he drew his rapier, as though an armed
-enemy had leaped suddenly upon him. As for me, I
-thought it just as well to be run through where I stood,
-as to be dragged again to prison—again tortured and
-finally hanged. So I remained motionless, gazing upon
-him. He paused for a moment, with his arm upraised,
-as though to strike, and then suddenly lowering his
-weapon, he said—‘Have you nought wherewith to defend
-yourself?’ I replied, that I was unarmed, as he saw,
-but that I was not afraid of dying, that he had already
-given me life, and that now he might himself revoke his
-gift. He seemed to pause again, to take inward counsel.
-His face, from being flushed, grew suddenly pale, and
-his features worked, and his lips quivered. At last he
-spoke—</p>
-
-<p>‘Eavesdropper!’ he cried, ‘you were lurking in your
-boat, beneath the cabin galleries of the galleon.’</p>
-
-<p>I answered, composedly, that I was no eavesdropper,
-but an adventurer who sought, as is common in war-time,
-to obtain information as to the designs of his enemy.
-He laughed scornfully, and then turning on his heel,
-sheathed his rapier with a clash. In an instant, however,
-he swung round again, with his fierce eyes all aflame.</p>
-
-<p>‘Ha!’ he exclaimed, ‘I see it—a rival. By all the gods,
-a rival! A successful rival! Good!—a jest worth
-telling. The blood of Old Castile against a tar barrel—and
-the tar the favoured fluid of the twain.’</p>
-
-<p>As he spoke thus—his hand again clutched the hilt of
-his rapier, but he withdrew it, with a loud angry ‘Pshaw!’—and
-strode, fuming, up and down the room. Then he
-paused, came close to me, and said—</p>
-
-<p>‘Most grateful mariner—most worthy pirate—a goodly<span class="pagenum" id="Page_276">[Pg 276]</span>
-return have you made to the man who gave you liberty
-and life. Why! thou heartless knave! were it not for
-me, you would long ago have swung a hundred-weight of
-carrion from a gallows, and now this—this is the gratitude
-thou showest.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Yes, Don José,’ I said, vehemently, ‘it is. To
-save a gentleman from committing a base action, is to
-make the worthiest recompence for a favour he has conferred.’</p>
-
-<p>The Spaniard looked at me from head to foot, raised his
-eyebrows, and gave a slight whistle.</p>
-
-<p>‘Truly, a pirate of a most moral breed—he reproves
-incontinence, he rebukes sin. Most righteous of Buccaneers,
-thou hast mistaken thy trade. Turn priest, man.
-Ha! I daresay you heard me tell the story of the diamond
-and pearls on the Virgin’s petticoat? Behold a
-career for thee. Get thee to the Cathedral on the Hill.
-To rob gaping Spaniards in a church is more profitable
-and more safe than to plunder fighting Spaniards on the
-sea. Turn priest, man. I warrant thee the rarest hand
-at the confessional.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Don José,’ I answered, ‘promise me, on your honour,
-to give up the wicked purpose with which you visit this
-house. You may then betray me to my enemies, and I
-swear to you, that not a word of what accidentally I overheard
-shall pass my lips.’</p>
-
-<p>He turned impetuously to me. ‘You know me not,
-mariner,’ he cried, vehemently. ‘Your life is safe for me.
-We Spaniards are not all of us alguazils!—human bloodhounds!
-Go! You have crossed my path, and chance
-has given you the advantage. But you have spoken well
-and acted well. I do not blame you—I think well of
-you. Once I would myself have done what you have
-done; nay, perhaps so would I still. But, caramba!
-Why put myself in a heat about such a trifle. Win her
-and wear her, man! The stakes are yours.’</p>
-
-<p>Don José took two or three turns from one end of the
-apartment to the other, I still remaining motionless where
-I had first addressed him; then suddenly stopping, he<span class="pagenum" id="Page_277">[Pg 277]</span>
-said, ‘If ever in future years you visit Madrid, seek me
-out, and I will be your friend.’</p>
-
-<p>Just then, the Señora Moranté entered. ‘Don José,’
-she said, ‘I have looked everywhere for Joseffa, but——’</p>
-
-<p>Here she observed me, and suddenly became silent.
-Don José went up to her, and took her hand.</p>
-
-<p>‘Señora,’ he said, ‘you will think me fickle, but I have
-become convinced, that in Joseffa’s hand, should I be
-fortunate enough to secure it, I should find no heart.
-The saints would prosper no such union, señora. What
-I say I have full warrant for believing. Señora, adieu!
-Here is your persecuted Scotch mariner. Make much of
-him—he is a leal man and true. I told you that I
-thought so, now I know it. Adieu, señora. Adieu, my
-flower of pirates. May Heaven prosper thee! Be moral—and
-a Buccaneer!’</p>
-
-<p>And so saying, with a reverence the most graceful and
-profound, Don José stepped gaily from the room. Oh,
-heart of man, what strange wild tunes thou playest—what
-discords mingling with and marring thy harmonies—what
-harmonies mingling with and attuning thy discords!
-Courteous and rude, paltry and noble, magnanimous
-and base. A man can be all these in an hour, in
-a breath, the grandest and the foulest thing in nature!</p>
-
-<p>Now, that I have told at length the strange chances
-which brought Don José and I face to face so often, and
-in such curious relations to each other at Carthagena, I
-would fain pass quickly over the story of my after stay
-in that city. The history leads to but a sad ending.
-Often and often, since I left the Spanish main, in rough
-dark middle watches, as well as in soft and balmy nights,
-when my ship stole through a waveless and shining sea,
-have I flown in fancy back to those bright days of hope
-and love—often have I meditated and pondered, until the
-very image of Joseffa has seemed to waver in the air and
-smile upon me, until the well-remembered tones of her
-voice have sounded audibly in mine ear amid the dash of
-waves, or the rustle of the swelling canvas. Sometimes
-crouching alone in the rocking top, with straining ropes<span class="pagenum" id="Page_278">[Pg 278]</span>
-and surging sails around me, I have peopled that airy
-platform with the household of the old merchant’s
-dwelling at Carthagena. The señora Moranté has pleaded
-with me, urging me that I should abandon my heresies
-and become a true son of the ancient church—the prating
-Martin has told his visions of angels and of saints, and
-Joseffa—Joseffa, who wore the token of our love upon
-her heaving heart, has looked up with her dark eyes and
-her smiling lips into my face.</p>
-
-<p>Vain phantoms all! the stately señora, the garrulous
-old steward, Joseffa herself—the sea entombs them all!
-The crooked coin I gave my love lies deep with her in
-caves which no line hath ever plumbed. The ocean is the
-most inscrutable of sepulchres. I know not, and no man
-knows, the place of their resting. The breeze was fair,
-and the sea smooth, which bore from Carthagena the ship
-in which they embarked to return to Spain. She was
-a stately merchantman, and as she left the port cannon
-thundered and church bells clashed from echoing steeples.
-Then spreading her fair white wings to the wind, and
-towering in her pride over the fleet of small craft which
-joyously, with shout and blessing, convoyed her out to
-sea—the good ship disappeared, holding her steady course
-for home. Since that day, no man has seen her or aught
-of her. No token of the ill-starred craft has been driven
-on any coast, or picked up on any sea; no bottle or flask,
-carrying a despairing message from dying to living men,
-has floated to any human hand. The fierce fire may have
-seized on her—the starting of a plank may have brought
-on the fatal leak. A sudden tornado may have crushed
-her under the howling waters. Beaten and belaboured
-by a long-blowing gale, she may at length have succumbed
-to the force of roaring winds and seas. God only knows
-her fate. She never came to land. She joined that
-mighty navy which rests, manned by bleaching bones, far
-down beneath those good keepers of secrets—the waves
-and swells of the ocean; those waves on which gallant
-fleets and living men ride buoyantly, joyously, all unwitting
-and unthinking that, mayhap, a mile below the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_279">[Pg 279]</span>
-keel, rise the topmasts of what was once a merrily bounding
-ship, now peeping forth amid the green branches and
-slowly waving boughs of those great forests which learned
-men say grow at the bottom of the sea.</p>
-
-<p>Sleep well, Joseffa, in your mystic entombment! It
-was a long tryste which we gave each other. When we
-parted we agreed to meet again in Spain, and there, being
-married, you would have sailed with me to see that Scotland
-of which we so often spoke. Man proposes—God
-disposes. It was not to be so. Although years had gone
-by, and I knew well that the ship which bore you had
-perished, still I kept the tryste at Alicant. I stood upon
-the sea-stretching quay upon the day and the hour we had
-covenanted. I kept the tryste as though it were a duty
-of my faith; it was soothing to my spirit to do so: but
-not even a shadowy phantom of my beloved flitted to my
-side. There were loud voices and busy throngs around.
-It is in the silence and the dusk of evening and of dawn
-that best we seem to see each other. And even these
-moments, what are they?—Times of musing, idle phantasy.
-People laugh at them and at me, and, perhaps,
-with reason. Who, indeed, would believe, seeing the
-grizzled locks and weather-beaten visage and horny hands
-of the man who is now captain of the Scotch brig ‘Royal
-Thistle,’ why so called we know well—that he, that jolly
-yarn-telling mariner—that tough old tangled lump of
-sea-weed—can yet remember the day when the flush of
-loving blood was hot within him? Who will credit that
-that pair of oozy, blinking eyes can yet see, as it were,
-looking into them bright and loving human orbs, long
-ago turned into pearls beneath the deep waters; and,
-finally, who will conceive that that square-built, stout-paunched
-veteran of the ocean was once a slim youth,
-with flowing love-locks, whom the voice of beauty thrilled,
-whose tears, the well-remembered tones of that voice will
-still provoke to flow?</p>
-
-<p>I have here shot a-head in my story, and anticipated
-other things. Were I, however, to have persevered in
-narrating, point by point, the adventures of my Buccaneer<span class="pagenum" id="Page_280">[Pg 280]</span>
-life, I should, perhaps, have left the tale of my early love
-but half told. I have, therefore, thought it better at
-once to make an end with that sad history. In a few
-words—Joseffa and I were betrothed, and her mother
-blessed us. Marriage then was impossible, for further
-claims against the father were every day arising, and
-when all were finally adjusted, the mother and daughter
-would be nearly as poor as myself. At length, all such
-matters being settled, they sailed for Spain, as I have
-narrated. Long before that time, however, I had quitted
-Carthagena, after solemnly engaging to meet my betrothed
-in three years at the city of her family, at Alicant.</p>
-
-<p>During that time I trusted well to amass treasures.
-The days whereof I write were those in which a single
-lucky capture made a fortune—in which one daring
-assault upon a Spanish battery might send the conqueror
-rolling home upon ingots of Indian gold. God forgive
-us if we were thieves and robbers of the sea; such we did
-not account ourselves. The Spaniards loudly swore that
-no European banner but their own should stream upon
-the trade-winds of the tropic—that no Europeans but
-themselves should traffic with those golden regions of the
-west. Upon this quarrel we fought, and—to the death.
-I never drew trigger upon a Spanish ship, that I did not
-deem myself as helping to unshackle the fettered enterprise
-of Protestant Europe. Why should we not, as well
-as its first discoverers, share in the spoils of the new
-world? The Spaniards held but inconsiderable portions
-of the soil—islands lay desert, great stretches of continent
-were tenanted only by handfuls of savages; but the
-Spaniard would keep all to himself. We did not admit
-the claim, and hence arose the Buccaneers. I said, that
-these adventurers ofttimes made a great fortune in a day.
-In many cases, these masses of wealth were no sooner
-won than they were lost. A week in Jamaica was quite
-sufficient to dissipate the spoils of the luckiest cruize.
-What brave sabres won, cogged dice lost; what gallant
-but foolish men amassed, at peril of their lives, infamous<span class="pagenum" id="Page_281">[Pg 281]</span>
-women squandered on brazen orgies. Little indeed of
-the wealth wrested by Englishmen from the Spaniards
-turned to happiness and content in the captor’s grasp.
-Well was it said, by an ancient Buccaneer, that gold ill-won
-by Spaniards, and ill-spent by Englishmen, enriched
-the latter no more than the former; that in the end the
-spoil slipped from the hands which grasped, as well as
-from those which held it; and that after all the fighting—all
-the suffering of these long wars—the yellow metal,
-for as much as it benefited either party, might well have
-been left in the mines by the Spaniards, or flung into the
-sea by the English.</p>
-
-<p>Still, as I have said, there were great exceptions to the
-general rule, and of these I trusted to prove one. Therefore,
-when last we saw each other—when last I felt
-Joseffa’s form clasped to mine, I whispered in her ear,
-that I well trusted in three years at Alicant, to come to
-her, not a poor-hearted fugitive, but a well-endowed lover.
-And thus we parted. When I write these latter words
-I doubt not but that I have penned all necessary to
-be said, to picture the scene by those who take interest
-in such passages. We parted, and we never met
-again!</p>
-
-<p>Interest had been made with the captain of a small
-coasting craft, a good fellow, and a friend of Martin’s,
-bound eastward to the Pearl Fishery, to take me along
-with him. Once at sea again, I trusted speedily to find
-means to transfer me to a deck above which floated the
-battle-banner of England. The Pearl fisherman sailed to
-join the fleet by night. Nearly four months had by that
-time elapsed, since I was captured in Carthagena harbour.
-Don José had obtained a reversal of his sentence of
-banishment, and had sailed for Spain. Concerning the
-alcaide and his clerk, I heard nothing; but Captain
-Guzman I saw as, in the gathering darkness of the evening,
-I hurried to the beach—lurking, like a troubled
-spirit, round the shop of the Jew money-lender.</p>
-
-<p>Joseffa had wept upon my neck—her mother had
-blessed me—Martin had told me of a special vision, in<span class="pagenum" id="Page_282">[Pg 282]</span>
-which St. Gieronimo had appeared and promised to watch
-over me!</p>
-
-<p>‘God bless them all!’ I had not thought shame to
-weep in saying it.</p>
-
-<p>Another half-hour and the ocean was again beneath my
-feet.</p>
-
-<p>‘Hurrah, for a new cruize! Hurrah, for new shipmates!
-Hurrah, for the riches of the ocean! Hurrah, for the
-pearl banks of the Rio de la Hacha!’</p>
-
-
-<hr class="r10">
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XXIII">CHAPTER XXIII.<br><br>
-<span class="fs80">HOW WE SAIL TO JOIN THE PEARL FLEET, AND THE NEGRO<br>
-DIVER’S STORY.</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p>The night I sailed from Carthagena was as starry and
-still as that in which I entered the bay. Negro fishermen,
-in canoes, again sung rude ditties as they shot their
-lines for pisareros—the rigging of stately merchantmen
-again cut with many dark and interlaced lines the sparkling
-sky—and again, and for the last time, I heard the
-bells of the rich Monastery of the Hill come pealing over
-the music of the surf.</p>
-
-<p>The night-breeze was very faint and feeble, so ‘Out
-sweeps’ was the word; and presently all the crew, myself
-among the rest, were tugging at our great heavy
-oars, and slowly urging the small bark out to sea. We
-were not alone upon the water—close to us, another
-vessel of our own rig and size, and bound upon the same
-voyage, was making head in the same way—the blades of
-her long oars sparkling in the sea, and both crews singing
-and shouting cheerily to each other. Every year there sails
-from Carthagena to the pearl banks of the Rio de la
-Hacha, about a dozen or a dozen and a half small vessels,
-called the Pearl Fleet. The greater part of the squadron
-had already gone, with a man-of-war to guard them. We
-were laggards, but Garbo, so the captain of our bark was
-named, trusted in a few days to join his comrades upon
-the banks. The Pearl Fleet is composed of small ships<span class="pagenum" id="Page_283">[Pg 283]</span>
-generally used for coasting. When I describe our craft,
-called the Pintado, the reader will have a good notion of
-all. She was, then, a two-masted vessel, of about thirty
-tons burthen, very shallow, and of great beam. Her
-mould was beautifully designed, sharp and wedge-like at
-the bows, with her sides towards the gunwale gently
-curved, as it were, like the lips of a bell, so that let her
-lie over before a smart gale, as much as she would, it was
-next to impossible to capsize her. She was but partially
-decked, towards the stem and stern, having an open space
-amidships, which was used when fishing for heaping the
-oysters in. Her crew consisted of four Spanish seamen,
-the captain, and two negro divers, of whom more anon.
-Thus there were eight of us in all, and we lived stowed
-away as we could best manage it, in the two little choky
-cabins, forward and aft, there being no distinction made
-between captain and crew. My up-bringing was not, as
-you may guess, much calculated to make me squeamish
-about where I lived and where I lay, but I confess, that
-the sweltering holes, all greasy and foul, with their brown
-swarms of cockroaches, and every now and then their
-stray centipedes, in which the Spanish sailors ate their
-garlic-smelling messes, and in which they flung themselves
-down often in their wet frowzy steaming clothes
-to sleep—I say these cabins were so horribly choky and
-miserable that, day and night, I kept upon deck, although,
-from the sharpness of the bark’s model forward, and the
-quickness of her pitch, she was very wet. Indeed, when
-it blew stronger than common, we shipped so much water,
-that we had to cover the open waist with a species of
-grating on which tarpaulings were stretched tightly,
-otherwise we would speedily have filled and gone down.
-The bark carried two tall, slim masts, raking very much
-aft, and supporting a couple of large lug or square sails,
-over which two broad, but low topsails, could be hoisted.
-Round her decks, at stem and stern, was a low iron rail,
-but no bulwark, so that the washing of the sea over us,
-in a breeze, was almost incessant.</p>
-
-<p>Garbo, the captain, was a good fellow, and a prime<span class="pagenum" id="Page_284">[Pg 284]</span>
-seaman, and he only on board knew that I was an
-Englishman, and what my real intentions were. The
-rest of the crew were told that I was a mariner of the
-Low Countries, who had also served in Spanish ships at
-home. They were a wild-looking set of fellows, with
-short trousers, not reaching much below the knee, broad
-leathern belts, in which were stuck formidable knives, and
-round their heads they wore yellow silk kerchiefs, over
-which they clapped broad straw hats during the heat of
-the day. All of them carried crucifixes of a black wood
-ornamented with gold, and if they did not pray much to
-the saints, at least they swore sufficiently by them. The
-two negroes took no part in the management of the ship,
-except it might be now and then lending a hand to their
-shipmates when a rope required an extra strain. One of
-them was very tall and gaunt, the other was short and
-stout. The latter, who was called by some common
-Spanish name, which I forget, was, or pretended to be, a
-Christian. He had a crucifix slung round his neck by a
-bit of rope yarn, and gabbled away about the saints like
-the European part of the crew. Further, he was quite
-‘Hail fellow, well met,’ with the Spaniards. He played
-a sort of wooden drum, and sung strange uncouth songs
-of his country to them, and sometimes he would mimic
-the manners and voice of some one of the Spaniards very
-skilfully, and to the great delight of the rest. In fact,
-he was a fat, little, good-natured, hearty soul, with a grin
-almost always upon his black mug, and, except when he
-was asleep, his chattering tongue never lay still. He
-would go gambolling about the deck like an overgrown
-monkey, whooping, and grinning, and singing, so that not
-a soul on board but he would set at last to laughing as
-loudly as himself. His comrade was a man of a very different
-sort, and him I would describe particularly. He
-was the blackest negro I ever saw, not having anything
-of the brown copper colour which some of that people
-and the Indians show. On the contrary, his skin was of
-a most sooty black hue, without the least redness of tinge.
-I have seen many big and strong men, but a vaster, a<span class="pagenum" id="Page_285">[Pg 285]</span>
-more gaunt, yet sinewy form, than that of this black, saw
-I never. He was more than six feet high; his great
-spreading shoulders were lumps of bone and hardened
-muscle, and his huge chest rose and fell so slowly, that he
-seemed to breathe but half as often as other men on
-board. His limbs were immensely gaunt and spare, and
-nothing but his great splay feet, which covered more
-than two streaks of the deck, could support the pile of
-bone and sinew which they bore erect. The face of the
-diver was most ill-favoured and lowering. It was a broad,
-flat visage, like the face of a grim and grisly idol. Just
-under the low, wrinkled forehead, two little pig eyes
-winked forth, half hidden by the patches of eyebrow
-which scowled in hairy folds above them. The corners of
-the fat blubber lips were drawn down with a most sour
-and evil expression, and all round them, and on the chin,
-were ragged sprouts of beard, like flakes of black wool
-stuck upon the grisly visage. Such was the tall diver,
-who was called by his African name of Wooroo. His
-speech was broken Spanish, which he did not speak half
-so well as his countryman, the short negro. But, in
-truth, he seldom spoke at all, being generally squatted on
-his hams in some remote corner of the vessel, where he
-would pass hours muttering to himself. He wore a pair
-of tattered old breeches, and upon his naked chest, fastened
-round his neck, there lay a sort of amulet, or
-charm, made of feathers, stuck through a ball of hard
-baked clay, crammed into a rude wooden case full of
-uncouth carvings. He was a worshipper of Ob, and this
-was his fetish.</p>
-
-<p>‘Look at that hangdog thief Wooroo,’ said Garbo to
-me the second afternoon we were at sea. ‘That fellow
-has just two good qualities. He is the best diver who
-ever went into the sea, and he is tractable to me who am
-his owner. I took him from the mines among the mountains,
-and the animal, after his sort, is grateful. For, in
-truth, I believe that he is amphibious in his nature, and
-that the water is as necessary for him that he may live,
-as is land, and, perhaps, a little more so.’ In answer to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_286">[Pg 286]</span>
-my further inquiries, the captain said that he was a slave,
-brought from the Guinea coast, where of late a great
-many negroes had been delivered up bound by tribes
-hostile to them, and sold to Spaniards, Englishmen,
-Frenchmen, and others, who employed them in those sorts
-of work in the Indies, which white men cannot perform
-and live. Soon after this, imagining, from the sombre
-and brooding look of this savage, that he could if he
-pleased tell us some story of his nation and of his captivity
-which would be worth hearing, I communicated my
-thought to Garbo. The captain laughed. ‘What can
-the savage have to say,’ quoth he, ‘but that some other
-savage fetched him a blow on the head with a war-club,
-or battle-axe, and then sold him to some Spanish trader
-for a cup of strong waters? But you shall be gratified:
-that is, if the monster chooses to unloose his tongue.’</p>
-
-<p>That night, the captain keeping the first watch, the
-weather being clear, and we and our consort sliding slowly
-over the long swells of the sea, the captain called the
-negro aft to where we sat upon the deck. The savage
-came with his usual slouching gait and scowling visage.</p>
-
-<p>‘Wooroo,’ quoth the captain, ‘we want to hear something
-about you; where you were born, and how you
-came hither.’</p>
-
-<p>The gigantic African only stared.</p>
-
-<p>‘Come, now,’ says Captain Garbo, ‘tell us your story,
-Wooroo—tell us about what you were in Africa, and
-what you did there.’</p>
-
-<p>The black at last opened his blubber lips, and replied,
-in broken Spanish, which I may render into English thus:
-‘What am me to you? What you want hear about me
-for?’</p>
-
-<p>‘Never mind that, Wooroo,’ says the captain, ‘if we
-have a fancy to hear you speak. I will give you brandy,
-man.’</p>
-
-<p>The eyes of the negro glistened, and Captain Garbo
-winking at me, went on: ‘You shall be drunk, Wooroo;
-drunker than you ever were before, Caramba! so drunk
-that you can’t lie flat even without holding on by the mast.’</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_287">[Pg 287]</span></p>
-
-<p>It was pitiful to see how the brute-man shook himself
-with pleasure, and how his features worked.</p>
-
-<p>‘You make me very drunk—dead drunk?’ he
-grunted.</p>
-
-<p>‘As dead as though you were smothered in a brandy
-cask, you two-legged hog,’ returned the captain; ‘and
-what’s more, you shall have a draught to wet your whistle,
-and set your tongue loose at once.’ So saying, the
-Spaniard disappeared down the narrow hatch, and presently
-emerged, bearing a large leathern bottle, with
-three drinking mugs, one of which he filled with hot,
-strong brandy; the savage tossed it off and held out the
-vessel for more.</p>
-
-<p>‘No, no,’ said Garbo; ‘you shall not get drunk
-until we have the story out of you. Come, heave
-a-head!—heave a-head!’</p>
-
-<p>The black at this began to speak. First, he discoursed
-in a monotonous tone, all the while eyeing the brandy,
-and evidently thinking of it. But presently, as he proceeded,
-he warmed over the tale, and spoke with emphasis,
-and often in a loud, fast tone, making violent gesticulations
-with his black, brawny arms, until, at length, as his
-excitement increased, he would, every now and then, burst
-from the broken Spanish, in which he, no doubt, found it
-difficult to clothe his thoughts, into his own tongue, a
-strange, husky sputtering, rising, as it were, from his
-very stomach; but being promptly admonished on these
-occasions that we were not savages, and understood not
-the gabble of his coast, he would stop, ask for a little
-brandy, and having drunk it, resume again his narrative
-in such Spanish as he could speak. I will try to give in
-English some imitation of his words; only the reader
-must remember that they seemed doubly strange to me,
-hearing them, as I did, in the harsh, deep tones of the
-savage, and marking his glistening teeth, and white,
-staring eyeballs, and clenched fists wildly waved around
-while he spoke. Somewhat in this fashion ran his tale.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_288">[Pg 288]</span></p>
-
-
-<p>The Story of the Negro Diver.</p>
-
-<p>‘I come from across the sea, and I am a slave. I dive
-into the water, and I bring up shell-fish, with white
-stones, which Spaniards worship. I am a great diver,
-and I can kill sharks with the sharp knife I carry in my
-hand. I was born in a wood, near a river. I curse them
-who carried me away. I make fetish to curse them. I
-ask the big Spirit that lives in fever mists to torment
-them. They are not alive, but bad wishes follow dead
-men to where they go. I helped to kill them, but still
-they carried me away across the sea, and I am here!</p>
-
-<p>‘I was born in a wood near a river. The trees grew in
-the water, and the slime of the water was oily at their
-roots. At night a hot mist came—very damp. Sometimes
-no moon, no stars, shine through that mist. It is
-the breath of the spirit of that land, and it kills strangers
-who come from afar. In the woods it was very dark, the
-branches kept the sun out; but near the river were huts,
-and round them corn grew and maize, for there the
-trees were burnt with fire, and the sun came hot—hot.
-My father was a warrior, and could slay his foes. He
-was strong, and had a great fetish. His war-club was
-heavy, and his bow was long, and his arrows hit the mark.
-My mother toiled, she reaped and baked, she thatched
-the hut, she paddled the canoe, she was strong. If she
-grew tired, my father lifted his war-club and then she
-worked on. In the hut was a broad bed of leaves, also
-calabashes to drink from, spears and clubs, and tools of
-iron. Also knives and an axe, which white men made.
-Also a god of palm-wood, with a necklace of wild beasts’
-teeth. One hour from the hut, the brown river met the
-sea: there was a bay there, and many huts. Where the
-river met the sea were rocks: canoes could go from the
-salt-water to the fresh, but not ships, because of the rocks,
-on which were white waves, very fierce and high. In a
-big hut near the sea, the king lived, with all his wives
-and slaves. He was a great king, and made war upon
-other kings. My father went to these wars, but I stayed<span class="pagenum" id="Page_289">[Pg 289]</span>
-in the hut at home. When I was yet little, I learned to
-dive and to swim, and to paddle a canoe. I loved the
-water better than the woods. I loved the brown river,
-and the sea which tossed, and heaved. If the waves
-filled the canoe, it was nothing to me; I laughed and
-swam. If a great root of a tree in the brown slimy
-river upset the canoe, it was nothing to me; I laughed
-and swam. I did not fear the shark out in the blue
-water; I could dive under him when he turned upon his
-back to swallow me, and his teeth glistened in white
-rows. I did not fear the muddy crocodile in the river,
-and in the silent creeks, black and deep, which he loves:
-his back is hard, but his belly is soft, and I could drive a
-knife into him, so that he would lash his scaly tail and
-die. I tell you I could swim on the water like birds
-which live there, and I could dive like the fishes which
-are beneath. My father could swim and he could dive,
-but I could swim further and dive deeper. My father
-called me the “Long-breathed,” and when ships came to
-where the river joins the sea, I dived down from them,
-and the mariners gave me cloth and nails. Then I was
-happy; I had enough to eat, and oil to anoint me and
-make my limbs supple and strong, and a fetish which
-was very good.</p>
-
-<p>‘Soon came a great ship to where the river met the sea,
-and the men of our nation and the king went on board
-to trade. We had oil to give them, and the teeth of
-great beasts, and the dust of gold all glittering, which
-merchants brought from where the sun rises. But the
-captain said to the king, I not want palm-oil, nor teeth,
-nor gold. I want men, I want slaves, and I will buy
-them; not palm-oil, nor teeth, nor gold. When the
-king heard this, he went to war, and the warriors of my
-nation went with him. There was a battle, likewise
-many huts burnt, but the captain gave the king guns,
-and he returned with many slaves, men and women—for
-bows and arrows are not so good to fight with as guns,
-which shoot thunder. Then the slaves were sent on
-board the great ship, and the captain gave us strong<span class="pagenum" id="Page_290">[Pg 290]</span>
-drink, and we were drunk and happy, and we said we
-would go to war and bring more slaves.</p>
-
-<p>‘So afterwards this was our trade. I likewise went to
-war—I likewise made slaves. We went many days from
-the sea, to where there were other nations. We had
-guns, and they had but bows and arrows, likewise lances,
-and clubs of wood which fire had hardened. Therefore,
-many were killed, and many were slaves, and we kept
-them until ships came, and then sold them, and they
-were taken away over the sea; but we were rich and
-powerful, and had plenty of strong drink, which we
-loved; though many died of it.’</p>
-
-<p>‘As you will, Wooroo,’ says Captain Garbo, interrupting
-him, ‘if you only get enough of it.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Give some now,’ answered the negro. He drank off
-a small mugful, and went on, with more and more animation,
-as follows:—</p>
-
-<p>‘Once a ship came, and she waited for slaves outside
-the rocks, where the sea burst white. Then I had a hut
-and a wife, and slaves of my own, and lived near where
-the king lived, and he knew that I was a warrior, and
-exceeding skilful in the water. One night the sky was
-black—black—and the sea moaned like a slave that
-moans for his country and his wife, and there were
-sounds amid the branches of the big trees; also birds
-sang strangely, and the frogs croaked very loud from the
-marsh where they lived. Therefore, I knew that a great
-wind was coming to the land, from far off in the sea;
-and when I lay in my hut upon blankets, and listened, the
-storm blew loud, and I heard the great noise of the waves.
-In the morning, the sun was red in the sky, and I looked
-and saw the ship that was waiting for slaves, and she
-was tossed upon the waves, and the white men were
-waving their arms to us, who stood upon the shore.
-Not far from the ship were great rocks, and we knew
-that if she struck upon such rocks, she would break, and
-the white men would be drowned. But for a long time
-she was safe, because heavy anchors and strong ropes
-held her in her place: but the wind was great, and the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_291">[Pg 291]</span>
-ropes broke: then the white men cried with a loud shout,
-and the ship struck upon the rocks and was broken, and
-the white men drowned. In the night, the wind went to
-sleep and the stars shone, and on the morrow the sun
-was hot and bright upon the sea. So, soon we went to
-the broken ship; there were great treasures there of iron
-and cloth, and powder, which we dried, and casks of
-strong drink. There was more iron and cloth, and
-strong drink, than we could get for many slaves, won at
-many battles. Therefore we were glad that the rope
-broke, and the white men were drowned, because we had
-all. After this, many ships came, but great winds did
-not come, and we went to war, and my father was killed;
-but for all the slaves we brought, we did not get so
-much cloth, and iron, and powder, and strong drink, as
-we got when the ship was broken, and the white men
-drowned. At this the king was angry—I was angry:
-all the warriors of my nation were angry—and when a
-great ship came again, the king went into the wood to
-an Obi man that lived there, and asked him that he
-would make a fetish, so that a wind would arise out of
-the sea, and break the ship, that we might have all.
-The Obi man was good. He answered in these words—“I
-will make a fetish and give it to Wooroo. Great
-ropes hold the ship, but sharp knives can cut great ropes.
-Then a small wind will break the ship upon the rock.
-The white men fire at canoe, if canoe go near the ropes;
-but Wooroo a great diver—Wooroo a great swimmer—Wooroo
-has a sharp knife—Wooroo can dive deep down
-below the sea, and cut the ropes.”</p>
-
-<p>‘Then the king told me what the Obi man said, and I
-was glad, and sharpened my knife, and waited for a wind.
-The men of my nation knew it too, and we were glad,
-and said that the Obi man was wise. At last a wind
-came strong over the sea, and rattled the boughs of the
-forest, and the waves were white on the rocks. Then I
-went into the sea to swim and dive and cut the ropes.
-The surf was wild, but I am a great swimmer, and the
-surf could not drown me; and so I swam away out from<span class="pagenum" id="Page_292">[Pg 292]</span>
-the coast. I swam long. When I sank down into the
-valley between the waves, I could only see water—not
-land, nor the ship. Thus I passed to windward of the
-ship. If they saw my head, they thought it was a piece
-of wood, or a bird, or the head of some creature that
-lives in the sea. At length I was near the ship, and I
-saw the great rope from her bows going down into the
-water. I looked what way the rope went—it was under
-me. I drew my knife—I took a long breath—I dived.
-Down many fathoms I saw the rope; it stretched dimly
-out in the green sea. I clutched it; it shook—it
-trembled. Sometimes it slackened—sometimes it jerked
-out like an iron bar. I clung to it. The sea heaved and
-twisted me round and round it; but the knife was very
-sharp—my arm was very strong. The knife was half
-through the rope, when there came a jerk through all its
-strands, and it was torn asunder. One part was wrested
-out of my grasp, the other sank slowly into the sea. I
-rose up to the surface. I was almost spent; I swam
-faintly; I rested on the rolling sea. Then from the top
-of a wave I looked at the ship; she was already near the
-rock, and her side was to the waves. Men were in the
-rigging and among the ropes; they strived to loose the
-sails, but they had no time. The ship struck—the waves
-went over her—the masts fell—the crew were drowned!
-As I swam to land, I heard the people of my nation—how
-they shouted and were glad! That ship fared like
-the others—she broke, and we had the spoil. The
-powder, the cloth, the iron, and all things which we
-valued. Only three white men were saved, and we
-made them slaves. We sent them up the dark river,
-and into the dark woods far from the sea. They cried,
-and were in despair. They were sold to another nation,
-and we had the riches and rejoiced.’</p>
-
-<p>‘You infernal villain!’ cried Garbo. ‘The fellow talks
-of wrecking ships and drowning men by his devilish
-treachery, as if the tale were of building churches and
-saying masses.’</p>
-
-<p>‘I say truth,’ replied the negro. ‘Give me more strong<span class="pagenum" id="Page_293">[Pg 293]</span>
-drink.’ The captain shrugged his shoulders, and refilled
-the savage’s cup. The barbarian, whose eyes now began
-to gleam like a wild cat’s, broke out into a hoarse,
-guttural laugh, so savage and strange, that the watch on
-the forecastle called out to know what the noise was.</p>
-
-<p>‘It is only Wooroo singing,’ answered the captain.
-‘Go on, Wooroo.’ The negro, who was now getting
-excited by his story and the drink, needed no spurring.</p>
-
-<p>‘Ha! ha!’ he began, with that horrid laugh again.
-‘Two ships come after. Two times I sharpened my
-knife; two times I went into the sea; two times I cut
-the great rope, and the ships struck the rocks and were
-broken. Some of the white men were drowned. Those
-who were not, we sold, and they were taken away, many
-days’ journey to the rising sun, and there will be until
-they die, as I am, slaves.</p>
-
-<p>‘But we were wealthy and great. The king was
-powerful. He had more carabines, more iron, and more
-cloth than any king before. Strong drink ran amongst
-us like water in a river. We drank, we yelled, we
-whooped, we flung brands from the fire among the huts,
-and they were burned. Evil demons lived in those casks,
-and when we drank the fiery drinks, they entered in unto
-us and made us mad, and no man knew his brother. We
-fought among the burning houses, and the charred rafters
-were wet with blood. At length there came a ship to
-which we had already given slaves. We went aboard.
-I was on board with the king. We went into the great
-cabin, and they gave us more strong drink. They heard
-of four ships having been broken on the rocks hard by,
-and they asked us how it was. We said that a wind
-came up out of the sea, and that the ships were broken.
-They then asked us where the white men were, and we
-said that they were all drowned in the sea. On that they
-gave us more strong drink, and fires began to flash before
-our eyes. It was sweet drink, sweeter than ever we had
-tasted, and we drank greedily. The white men encouraged
-us, but they did not drink themselves, and they talked,
-of the ships that were broken. But we were getting mad,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_294">[Pg 294]</span>
-and we knew no more what we did. So the white men
-said that, if the king’s people were cunning, many more
-ships would be broken, and the king’s people would be
-rich. Then we fell into the snare, because we were mad
-with the strong drink, and we yelled out, and danced,
-and told the white men that they were but fools, and
-I drew out my knife, and I said: “Look here. This
-knife cut the great ropes that went down to the bottom
-of the sea, and the ships were broken. I cut the great
-ropes. I have a strong fetish. I am a great diver and a
-great swimmer.” After this I remember nothing, but
-that I was asleep, and that I awoke. It was in a dark
-place, very hot, and I could scarcely breathe. On my
-arms and legs were mighty chains. I called out, and a
-voice answered me in the darkness. It was the voice of
-the king, and he said, “I am chained, I know not where.”
-We shouted, and screamed, and clanked our chains, and
-then when we lay still, we felt the prison we were in
-move with a regular motion, and we knew that we were
-in a ship upon the sea. So, white men came with lanterns,
-and they told us we were slaves. We roared and
-howled at them, and spit upon them, but our chains
-would not allow us to rise and kill them. Therefore they
-laughed, and asked me if I would swim and dive and cut
-the great rope that held the ship to the bottom of the
-sea, so that the king’s people might be rich. First, we
-trusted in our fetishes, but they did not help us; and the
-king said: “Once go ashore, and me catch the Obi man,
-and send the tum-tum drum through the wood, and the
-people come, and me burn the Obi man for a sacrifice;
-me burn him with fire, and torment him till he die.” But
-we did not go ashore—we were slaves. Then other slaves
-come, men and women, and lay down in the dark with us.
-The white men were there with whips and sticks, and
-they tormented us, until we lay so that we were one
-great lump of human flesh. All through the ship, oh!
-there was the heat, and the stench, and the sweat, and
-the roarings! There was no light but from two little
-hatchways with gratings, and square bits of light came<span class="pagenum" id="Page_295">[Pg 295]</span>
-down there; but I was far from them, and the air I
-breathed was more foul than the mist fever that comes
-up out of the swamp with the smell of the rotten mud.’</p>
-
-<p>The poor devil told this part of his strange tale with a
-visible shudder. He went on.</p>
-
-<p>‘The ship sailed away, and there were waves very
-rough, and the slaves lay sick, rolling over each other,
-roaring and fighting to get near the hatchways. But
-white men, with iron bars, struck them, and drove them
-back. The white men struggled backwards and forwards,
-and beat and slashed the slaves with iron bars and knives.
-They carried lanterns at first, but the fire went out in
-the bad air and the stench. The place was only as high
-as half a man; there were hundreds and hundreds driven
-into it. The smoke of our bodies rose out of the hatchways.
-We struggled and tore each other with hands and
-teeth, because of the agony of sickness and smothering.
-We coughed, and gasped, and panted, and dashed ourselves
-here and there in our chains. Soon many died.
-The white men dragged out the corpses and took them
-away. In our struggles, we kicked the dying beneath
-our feet. Sometimes they clasped our legs, and tried to
-scratch or bite. The corpses were cold and soft beneath
-us, and all around was slime, and dirt, and air that was
-rotten, and one stench of corruption and of death.</p>
-
-<p>‘In half a moon, more than half of the slaves were dead
-and thrown overboard. The king was yet alive; when
-he came on board, he was oily and fat, but now his bones
-were sticking out like knots and splinters, and he was
-covered with sores, as a leopard with spots. We lived
-on the flour of cassava and water. White men came
-down with great baskets of it mixed, and we plunged in
-our hands and drew out lumps of leaven, and ate. We
-did not now fight or struggle, but lay and tried to
-sleep; we had more room, and five or six died every day,
-because the stench had brought the fever spirit, and
-he sailed with us in the dark hold. Then, one night when
-the white moon was coming down the hatchway, the
-captain of the ship approached, and turned his lantern<span class="pagenum" id="Page_296">[Pg 296]</span>
-upon us as we lay—the king and me—where they had
-first chained us down. Then he began to ask where
-were the white men who were carried off after the ships
-broke, to be slaves. But he stopped and said to two
-sailors who were with him, “Take off their chains and
-bring them on the deck; it is better to speak there in
-the moonlight, than in this stench.” Our chains were
-taken off—we climbed the ladder—we passed the hatchway—and
-we stood upon the deck. The moon shone, as
-it shone above my hut—above the dark woods—above
-the dark river—above my country; the breeze was sweet
-to taste, as palm wine after bitter water. The white men
-slept upon the deck—the ship went steady before the
-night wind which came over the sea. It was good. The
-captain asked us again where the white men were slaves,
-and we told him a moon and two moons and three moons
-from where the dark river joined the sea. Then we said,
-that if he carried us back the white men would be found,
-and he would have them, and we would go ashore and we
-would make war and bring him many slaves and never
-cut the great ropes again. The captain spoke to the
-two white men who were with him, and very soon they
-took us down below, but they did not chain us again;
-many other slaves were also unchained, for all were very
-quiet; and when the white men struck them, or cut their
-flesh with their knives, they only groaned or cursed in
-their throats. I lay awake all that night, and the god
-that stood in my father’s hut, with the necklace of wild
-beasts’ teeth, gave me thoughts in my heart. I said
-to myself, we are slaves, but we may be masters; only
-one watches at the hatchway—at night the wind is small
-and the sea is smooth—the white men sleep in the
-moonlight—we may arise and kill them, and have the
-ship and its riches. I thought these things long to
-myself, and before the dawn I wakened the king and told
-him, and we conversed in whispers; the next day we
-told others, who were the stoutest men left, and who
-could speak the language of our nation. Thus we agreed,
-and we searched for billets of wood and spikes of iron,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_297">[Pg 297]</span>
-and bits of chains or fetters, to arm ourselves. The
-night came again, and the moon shone again through the
-hatchway. The wind was small and the sea smooth, and
-on deck the white men slept in the moonshine. Then
-every man adored his fetish, and called upon his god that
-he believed in, to help. I gave the sign, which was a
-shout of war, such as we raised when we rushed upon a
-sleeping village of our enemies to capture slaves. Then
-we all rushed at the hatchway—we tossed aside the
-grating of heavy wood and iron, as though it had been of
-the wattled hurdles which we planted round our fields.
-We were free. We shouted—we climbed—we leaped—we
-swarmed out in the moonshine. The white man who
-stood armed by the hatchway had only time to fire his
-carabine among us. Then a score of sticks, and iron
-chains, with handcuffs swung to them, split asunder his
-head. In a moment he was overboard and sunk in the
-sea. The white men were conquered. Some were asleep
-in hammocks, some on the deck. With great shouts and
-screams we rushed at them. We tore them from their
-beds. We dashed them on the deck. We slashed them
-with the knives we found. We hove them overboard.
-And the sharks which followed us from Africa, and were
-fat with the flesh of our fellows, swallowed the white men
-also. Therefore we were the masters of the ship, and it
-seemed a good slave; for when all the white men were
-dead and gone, it sailed on, and the small wind blew, and
-the sea was smooth, just as before. I looked then for the
-king, but he was dead. The one shot which the white
-man fired struck him—the ball drove the fetish of feathers,
-which was upon his breast, into his heart. He was dead,
-and the sharks had him also.</p>
-
-<p>‘Then all my countrymen called out, and said that I
-was king in his place, and that we must go back to
-Africa, to the deep forests and the dark rivers, to their
-huts, and their wives, and their slaves, to where the panther
-leaped and the crocodile swam, and the large bats
-hung in clusters from the trees. So they led me to the
-helm, and they said, “Steer us home.” There were clouds<span class="pagenum" id="Page_298">[Pg 298]</span>
-then over the moon, and the night was dark. I said,
-“Wait until the morning, and I will steer you home.”
-The morning came, the clouds passed away, the sun rose,
-and the wind came fast over the sea. They said again,
-“Steer us home.” But I looked around. I looked far
-and near. There was no land, only water. As in the
-desert there is only sand; so round us there was only
-water. It was the same on the right hand and on the
-left. There was the sky and the sea, and that was all.
-How could I steer them home? But if I said I could
-not steer them home, they would kill me; therefore I
-took the tiller in my hand. I stayed by it all day.
-Those who were the masters of the ship and of me,
-danced and sung about the deck. Sometimes they asked
-when we would be at home. I said, soon. They thought
-that I could conduct the ship to land. They would not
-let me leave the tiller. They brought food there. I slept
-there. I was afraid to move. I did not know the road
-home. Days came and turned into nights, and nights into
-days again. The sun rose out of the sea, sometimes on
-the right hand, sometimes on the left; sometimes before
-us, sometimes behind us. We were wandering upon the
-sea; a moon passed over us, and they said to me, “We
-are not yet at home; there is no land, only water. Take
-us home, or we will kill you, as you made us kill the
-white men.” Then I was sorry that we killed the white
-men. The night after, the wind grew loud, and the
-waves beat over the ship. I did not know what to do.
-The sails were left as the white men had spread them.
-The ship was tossed. She moaned, and groaned, and
-plunged deep into the waves. The sails made strange
-noises, the masts reeled and bent as trees in a hurricane.
-Then one by one they broke, and fell into the sea. The
-foam flew over us all night. A great load of masts, and
-ropes, and sails lay upon the decks, and from the decks
-they reached down into the sea. These we cut asunder
-with hatchets, for they were pulling the ship down into the
-depths; and when the morning came, the wind had gone
-away, and the ship lay quite still. She had no masts,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_299">[Pg 299]</span>
-and no sails; and as a man without legs cannot walk, so
-a ship without rigging cannot move upon the ocean.</p>
-
-<p>‘And still all on board cried, “Take us home.” Then I
-said to them, “We cannot go home, there are no sails;
-we must die here upon the sea.” Then for the first time
-I left the helm. I knew one thing that none else there
-knew—I knew where there was the strong drink.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Ay, that I’ll be bound you did!’ said Captain Garbo.</p>
-
-<p>I watched, and when none saw, when it was dark, I
-took a great vessel of strong drink, and also bread and
-meat, and went down with them into the deep places of the
-ship. I went near the keel. I sat in darkness, with beams
-around me, and ropes, and the rotten water that flowed
-slowly in from the sea—and which moved with regular
-tides, backwards and forwards, because of the ship rolling
-on the waves. That water had the smell of the thick
-mud in the creeks among the woods, after the rains, when
-the mists arise. It washed and gurgled over the slimy
-wood, and also the rusty chains and nails which lay at
-the bottom of the ship. There I ate and drank, and no
-one saw me. I heard them howling up above, for they
-knew not where I was; but they knew they were to die
-upon the sea. I stayed there drinking and sleeping.
-The strong drink was good, it made me drunk; it made
-me as if I was back again where the dark river joins the
-sea. When the jug was dry I went for more. It was
-night, and a great wind was blowing over the waves, and
-the ship rose up and sank down, like the first ship that
-went upon the rocks and was broken. The people were
-running on the deck—they were in fear; they said the
-sea was coming up over the ship. I did not care; I
-knew where the strong drink was. I got another jug,
-greater than the first, I also got some bread. As I
-passed in the dark, I heard a man say to a woman, “In
-two days there will be no food left.” I did not care; I
-went with the strong drink into the secret place of the
-ship. There I lay among the ropes and beams, and the
-stinking water which gurgled among them, as the waves
-beat hard on the outside. It was like a cave in the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_300">[Pg 300]</span>
-woods: it was like the den of the wild beasts. I burrowed
-in it like the crocodile in his abiding place, among the
-weeds and the thick herbage which grows by the creek.
-There I ate, there I drank—oh, much—much. The
-strong drink was like fire in me, and like light to me; it
-showed me my hut, where the river joins the sea; it
-showed me sun, and moon, and stars, and the sky over
-the woods and the sea; it showed me the deep waters
-where I paddled my canoe, and where I swam, and where
-I dived. I shouted and sang war-songs, and those above
-thought that the spirits of their enemies were exulting
-and were singing. When the jug was empty I went on
-deck. Many days had come and gone away into the past.
-The deck was full of people; they lay upon the planks,
-they groaned and cried, they were starving, and they
-yelled out for water, and for cassava, and millet, and maize,
-and rice. I went to the secret place where were the
-strong drinks. Lo! there were no more! Others found
-out the place, and took the drinks. I searched everywhere,
-but there was nothing—not a drop—not a crumb.
-There was no more food, no more drink—now we must
-die. I sat upon the deck, so did all; no man or woman
-spoke: sometimes one moaned—that was all. It was
-the same in the sunlight and the moonlight—when the
-air did not move and when the wind was strong. I
-looked upon the sky, it was always blue, there were no
-clouds from dawn-time to sun-setting: there was no rain
-to cool our lips; our tongues swelled and our throats
-were dry—as dry as the hole which the scorpion burrows
-in the hot sand. The people died one by one. When,
-they died they lay upon the deck where they fell; they
-rotted there amongst us, but we did not move to throw
-them to the sharks. At last there were ten men and
-women dead, to one man or woman living; then we spoke
-and we talked who would die next. One said he would,
-and another, that he would. When we die we fly back
-to Africa, and we said one to the other, “If you die first,
-you say we are coming: you say we are flying in the air
-behind you to Africa, to the dark woods and the dark<span class="pagenum" id="Page_301">[Pg 301]</span>
-river.” Then I sent messages to my father, who was
-killed in war, and to the king; I sent them by a young
-man who was very weak, and whose eyes were glazed.
-He lay close by me. I watched him well. His breath
-came longer and longer—then it ceased, as a branch you
-move ceases gradually to swing—and the jaw dropped
-down. I said, “Ha! my messenger has departed; I am
-glad.” That night there were but five left. I was the
-strongest of the five, but I could not rise from my seat
-amid the corpses. The breeze came fresh in the night;
-clouds came with it, and out of the clouds rain fell. We
-held up our mouths and we were refreshed. So, by means
-of the sweet rain, four out of the five lived until the grey
-light came out and showed fogs hanging on the water.
-The wind was small, and the sea smooth; and as the sun
-climbed out of the ocean, the fogs rose up and melted
-away, and we all gave a faint shout together, for not half an
-hour from us, a great ship, with many sails, glided like a
-bird upon the sea. As we looked, a canoe, with white
-men, came from the great ship, paddling fast towards us,
-and soon the white men leaped up among the corpses on
-the deck. They gave a great cry of horror when they
-saw all the planks covered with bodies, some sitting, some
-lying, some piled up upon each other in heaps—where
-fathers and sons, and brothers and sisters, and husbands
-and wives, had died together—and they were about to go
-back hastily into their canoe, but we all cried as with one
-voice for water. Then they turned and beheld us, and
-after some talking, they lifted us up and put us into the
-canoe, and rowed us to their ship. So was it that we
-became slaves again. Then they spread forth all sail,
-and our old ship, with its cargo of corpses, was left drifting
-about on the sea.</p>
-
-<p>‘We had good food and good water; we grew stout
-again, lusty, and strong. A moon passed away, and then
-we saw land, and a city of the white men. The city was
-called Porto Bello. We were sold there. My master
-took me up far into great mountains, where there was
-gold. The gold was down in the earth. The slaves dug<span class="pagenum" id="Page_302">[Pg 302]</span>
-holes in the sides of the steep hills. We crawled
-into these holes. We dug and hammered in dark places
-under ground, and white men with whips lashed us if
-we stopped to rest. But I longed and panted again for
-rivers and the sea. I grew weak, and my arms were
-soft and thin, and a spirit whispered to me, and I put
-earth and clay into my mouth, and swallowed them.
-Other slaves did the same, and slowly they died, and
-flew back to Africa. I wanted to die, and I ate much clay.
-I was very sick and weak, but they flogged me with
-whips, until I crawled into the holes, digging and hollowing
-under the earth for gold. At last—’</p>
-
-<p>‘At last,’ said Captain Garbo, ‘you have got so far
-with your story, that I may finish it for you. Being on
-a visit to see some of the gold mines of Darien, the overseer
-of one of them told me that he was losing almost all his
-negroes of the disease or superstition peculiar, I believe,
-to those Africans and called ‘dirt-eating.’ He pointed
-out to Wooroo there, as one of them who was dying the
-fastest, and on my speaking to him, he told me what he
-has several times repeated, that he was a great swimmer
-and a diver. So such being the case, and being then, as
-now, much engaged in the pearl fishery, I bought the fellow
-for a trifle, took him down to the coast, and I am bound
-to say that a better hand under water never plunged over
-a boat. As soon as he was afloat, he recovered his health
-and spirits fast; and now, I suppose, there are not two
-men, white or black, in the fleet, that the fellow could
-not grasp in either of his hands, and smash their heads
-together.’</p>
-
-<p>As soon as his master had interrupted him, and bade
-him cease speaking, Wooroo lost all the look of intelligence
-and excitement which had gleamed in his eyes. He
-sat like a brainless statue of black wood. He had
-performed his task, and at length he held out both hands
-towards the spirit-flask, and only muttered—</p>
-
-<p>‘Give me the wages you said—make me much
-drunk.’</p>
-
-<p>Captain Garbo, without a word, filled a large measure<span class="pagenum" id="Page_303">[Pg 303]</span>
-with brandy, and handed it to the savage, who rose with
-it, and walked to a corner in the deep-waist of the ship.
-Passing there an hour after, I saw the brute lying
-insensibly drunk, with the empty measure still grasped in
-his hand.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="r10">
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XXIV">CHAPTER XXIV.<br><br>
-<span class="fs80">MY ADVENTURES AMONG THE PEARL FISHERS, AND MY ESCAPE<br>
-FROM THE FLEET.</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p>All this time we were beating gaily up to windward in
-company with our consort, both boats proceeding at much
-the same rate, and frequently hailing each other and
-sailing nearly alongside. On the third day from that of
-our departure, we saw upon our right, towering in great
-blue masses out of the sea, the high land of Santa
-Martha. Mariners say that it is higher than the Peak of
-Teneriffe, and that when the weather is very clear, there
-is a certain circuit of the Caribbean sea, not far from
-hence, where, from the tops of a lofty vessel, you may see
-at once the distant ridges of Hispaniola, the Blue
-Mountains of Jamaica, and the Peak of Santa Martha
-upon the main land. The next day, the coast line being
-far distant, and being cloven, as it were, by the great
-river De la Hacha, which here comes into the sea, we
-saw riding at anchor, in-shore from us, a squadron of
-small ships. We being still well at sea, the water
-beneath was of a deep blue; but where the Pearl Fleet,
-for such they were, lay, the hue of the sea was a light
-green. It was as glorious an afternoon as ever shone
-under the tropics, as bowling cheerily before the sea-breeze,
-we ran down for our sister ships, they lying at
-their anchors above the great bank of pearls. There
-were fourteen or fifteen barks similar to our own, and at
-some distance was a stately frigate, which protected them,
-lying-to.</p>
-
-<p>‘That is the convoy of the Pearl Fleet,’ said Garbo;<span class="pagenum" id="Page_304">[Pg 304]</span>
-‘we must first speak her, and she will allot our station on
-the bank.’</p>
-
-<p>And, in fact, as he talked, the great maintop-sail of the
-Spanish ship was filled, and her bows, falling off from the
-wind and pointing to us, she moved slowly out to meet
-us. As she drew near, I could not help thinking that she
-was the same vessel which had chased the ‘Will-o’-the-Wisp.’
-At any rate, she had the same richly-carved
-bows, full of figures of angels and saints, and the same
-goodly fabric of rigging towering up against the blue
-sky. Presently, she hove-to again, our small sails being
-becalmed under her lee, and Captain Garbo, with two of
-his men, went aboard her in the small canoe which the
-bark carried. As for myself, I did not care to trust my
-neck on board a Spanish man-of-war. Indeed, I kept as
-much out of sight as I very well could, pretending to be busy
-about a thousand little matters on board the bark. I noted,
-however, that the Spaniard bore twelve great guns upon
-either side, besides double batteries upon forecastle and
-poop. Her high decks swarmed with men, who scrambled
-over into her chains and out at her port-holes, and
-chatted with the Spanish part of the bark’s crew, and
-mocked and gibed at Wooroo as he sat upon his hams
-on the deck, taking no more notice of what was said to
-him than the mast. Presently the captain returned with
-a card in his hand, whereon was inscribed the station of
-the bark upon the bank. Each boat had its own
-appointed place; and the frigate was there not only to
-protect the fleet against Buccaneers, but to enforce the
-rules which the Spanish government, to whom the fishery
-belongs, lays down to be observed by the barks which
-prosecute it. The pearl bank extends for a great many
-miles in length and one in breadth, there being a deep
-channel about three or four leagues broad between its
-inmost edge and the land. Our position was towards the
-eastern extremity of the bank, and so we beat up towards
-it, passing many of the anchored boats, who hailed us
-cheerily, and asked what news from Carthagena. As we
-sailed along, we saw the divers, all of them either Indian<span class="pagenum" id="Page_305">[Pg 305]</span>
-or negroes, standing often upon the edge of the boats,
-poising their bodies for a moment, and then plunging
-head-foremost down into the sea. Some of the fleet were
-more deeply laden than others, that depending upon the
-number of the oysters which chanced to lie scattered
-under each boat. As soon as the cargo is made up, the
-pearl fisherman weighs, hoists his lug sails, and runs in
-for the shore; but if the frigate fires two guns, one close
-after the other, he must lie-to, until a boat from the big
-ship comes and gives him leave to proceed. Although
-the rule, however, is, that each boat fishes and sails for
-itself, without attending to its neighbours, yet the convoy
-always tries as far as possible to arrange matters, so that
-the fleet may sail in a body to the shore, the frigate
-attending them to windward. If it be suspected that
-there are Buccaneers upon the coast, the ordinary rule is
-indeed altogether suspended, and no boat is permitted to
-weigh anchor until the commodore fire a gun, and hoist a
-blue flag at his foretop-gallant-mast head, when the whole
-squadron run gaily together for the Ranchiera, as the
-pearl village is called, upon the banks of the Rio de la
-Hacha. When we joined the fleet no danger was, however,
-suspected, and by the time that we had taken our
-station, and let the anchor splash from the bows, about
-half the barks, which were deepest in the water, had
-weighed; and hoisting their brown patched sails, scudded
-away before the last of the sea-breeze. As soon as it
-became dark each boat hoisted a lantern to its mast-head;
-the frigate showing two, one above the other, in the foretop-gallant
-rigging. The night was calm and still.
-Every now and then we would hear the faint sound of
-songs, coming over the water from distant barks; and, as
-hour after hour passed away, it was marked by the clang
-of the great ship’s bell. Meantime, on board our bark,
-we were busy preparing for to-morrow’s fishing. The
-waist was cleared out, and the decks fore and aft lumbered
-with the coils of rope and old canvas, flung aside to make
-room for the expected overflow of oysters. Then the
-baskets to be used in lifting them from the bottom of the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_306">[Pg 306]</span>
-sea, strong cages of thick wire, all rusty and bent, were
-prepared; the tackle was rigged, and lines were affixed
-to heavy pieces of lead, furnished with handles for the
-divers to grasp, so as to sink the quicker to the bottom.
-These preparations over, we cooked and ate our suppers
-and turned in, leaving but one hand on deck for an
-anchor watch, as sailors call it.</p>
-
-<p>‘Now,’ thought I, as, according to my custom, instead
-of crawling into the little cabins, which were not much
-better than the hold of the ship which had carried
-Wooroo from Guinea, I laid myself down on deck,
-well muffled up in old sails, to keep the heavy dews away—‘Now,’
-thought I, ‘I have heard of kings and queens who
-slept on beds whereof the curtains were heavy with
-pearls, all glittering in their lustre above them, but here
-am I now, and here be a fleet of us poor sea-tossed
-mariners sleeping upon a bed with more pearls beneath
-and around us than there are in the treasuries and the
-thrones, and on the royal bed-curtains to boot, of London,
-or Paris, or Madrid.’ I know not whether the kings and
-queens whereof I have spoken slept the better for the
-pearls above them; I know I slept well with pearls
-below me, being indeed favoured, perhaps by St.
-Gieronimo, with a vision in which I saw the ‘Will-o’-the
-Wisp’ suddenly appear in the midst of the Pearl Fleet
-and engage the Spanish frigate, Stout Jem himself fighting
-in single combat with the captain, and at length, by one
-stout thrust, pinning him to his own mainmast; when,
-just as I was about to spring forward to haul down the
-golden flag of Spain from the man-of-war’s topmast, a loud
-voice, coming from real flesh and blood lungs, smote my
-ear, and, starting up, I saw Captain Garbo and the rest
-scrambling through the hatchways in their shirts, while
-the anchor watch was shouting lustily that there was a
-strange vessel rowing with sweeps through the fleet, and
-that he had even heard the muttering of the voices on
-board of her. At this, I confess very willingly, my heart
-made a leap into my mouth. Was my dream a true
-vision—was Stout Jem, indeed, so near? We all held<span class="pagenum" id="Page_307">[Pg 307]</span>
-our peace and listened, but we heard nothing. It was
-now quite dark. The night had got cloudy, and there
-were neither stars nor moon. The air, too, was quite
-still, and the tap-tap of the water against the ridges of
-overlapping planks on the clinker-built side of the boat,
-as she rocked slowly on the swell, was the only sound we
-could distinguish. The lights of the other barks were
-gleaming on the dark ocean, and the two lanterns of the
-frigate swayed slowly from side to side, as though they
-were meteors playing among the stars.</p>
-
-<p>‘Tush, Pedro,’ said Captain Garbo,’ you fell asleep,
-man, and dreamed you saw a ghost. You deserve to be
-dipped alongside, just to waken you.’</p>
-
-<p>But at that moment we all started, for suddenly there
-came over the water a loud crash, as of two ships meeting,
-followed all at once by a crackling volley of musketry,
-which glanced bright through the darkness, gleaming in
-fiery streaks over the black oily-looking water, and then,
-mingling with the reports of the fire-arms, a great hearty
-cheer, such as Englishmen give when they leap upon the
-decks of an enemy. By the flashes we saw that one of
-the largest and heaviest laden of the pearl barks had been
-laid aboard by a very long low-built boat with three
-raking masts, like those of the vessels which the French
-call <em>chasse-marées</em>, and moved by a number of great
-sweeps, which extended from her sides like the long legs
-of some huge insect of the sea.</p>
-
-<p>‘The Pirates! the Buccaneers!’ screamed all our crew
-together, and they rushed to haul down our lantern, so
-that we might the better escape in the darkness. In the
-meantime, there was a great crashing and scuffling, with
-heavy plunges in the water, as though men had leaped or
-been thrown overboard, and then, in the course of a moment,
-there was again silence, and the light of the captured
-vessel, for such no doubt she was, disappeared.
-But on board of the rest of the fleet there sprang up, as
-you may conceive, the strangest uproar. Instead of
-hauling down their lights, as we had done, in less than a
-minute the sea was all a-fire with the infinity of lanterns<span class="pagenum" id="Page_308">[Pg 308]</span>
-and torches which they waved and flashed from rigging
-and deck, while such a clamour of shouts, blowing of
-trumpets and conch shells, beating of drums, and firing of
-muskets and pistols, I never heard. It appeared, indeed,
-as if the pearl fishers imagined that they would drive
-away their enemy by making a noise and hallooing; all
-this, however, was done, Captain Garbo said, to alarm
-the convoy; but, truly, they must have kept sleepy
-watch aboard of her, if they did not hear the tumult
-of the first attack. But in the meantime the great
-ship was aroused—a flash of red flame gleamed from out
-her sides, showing for a moment boats full of men surging
-in the water beneath, and her sails falling in great
-white patches from her yards, as she prepared to give
-chace to the enemy. But these broad sails were useless;
-not a reef point rattled against the canvas in the great
-stillness of the night; but we heard the dash of oars and
-distant shouts as the boats of the frigate pulled away
-from her among the fleet. Meantime, the din on board
-the different barks subsided, but we could see the crews
-as they ran to-and-fro upon the decks, still carrying
-torches and lanterns, while every minute or two the frigate
-fired a great gun, for what purpose I know not,
-only that it seems as if Spaniards, like Frenchmen, seldom
-think they are doing anything if they be not making
-a noise. But where, meanwhile, was the Buccaneer rowboat,
-or galley? I strained my eyes through the darkness
-in the direction in which I had seen her. Could she
-be an Englishman, I thought to myself, and, if so, would
-it be possible for me to board her? A light canoe floated
-alongside our bark, on which my eye fell as these ideas
-rose up in my mind. But, when I reflected a minute, I
-saw how mad would be any attempt to make my way in
-the darkness, and amid pursuing boats, to the vessel,
-even although she might be, what I had no certain means
-of knowing her—a friend.</p>
-
-<p>While I was pondering thus, Captain Garbo accosted
-me in a whisper—</p>
-
-<p>‘This is but a mad freak of your countrymen,’ he said,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_309">[Pg 309]</span>
-‘for such I judge them to be. They could not expect to
-carry off the bark from the middle of a fleet, and without
-a breath of wind either.’</p>
-
-<p>Just as he spoke, a jagged flash of lightning, which
-dazzled me, tore right across the sky to the westward,
-and the loud crackling thunder had not ceased to explode
-above us, when a heavy puff of wind, bearing broad plashing
-rain-drops before it, struck our bark, and made her
-swing round to her anchor like a weathercock.</p>
-
-<p>‘A squall,’ I cried out, ‘and the privateer knew it was
-coming. It was that made them so bold.’</p>
-
-<p>Just then a whole row of lanterns was run up to the
-gaff of the great ship.</p>
-
-<p>‘See,’ said Garbo—‘a squall indeed. That is the
-signal for the recal of all her boats.’</p>
-
-<p>There was nothing which appeared to me very ominous
-in the look of the night. I only expected a pretty sharp
-outburst of wind and rain with thunder and lightning.
-And so, indeed, it proved, for in less than five minutes
-from the first flash, a strong gusty wind, driving before it
-a pelting rain, was whitening the sea around us, and hissing
-and whistling through the few ropes which formed
-our rigging, while the bark herself tore and plunged at
-her anchor, as if she would have wrenched it out from its
-hold amid the oysters. In a moment the flaming torches,
-shown from so many of the fleet, were blown out or
-quenched; but the great ship, burning a bright light in
-her main rigging, we saw her all lurid and blue in the
-glare, leaning heavily over to the blast, her slanting
-yards dotted with the seamen, who were taking in sail as
-fast as they had spread it forth. In a few minutes again
-all around was darkness, except where the glimmer of a
-lantern, tossing and tumbling as though a giant were
-flinging it from hand to hand, showed where one of the
-Pearl Fleet was jerking and straining at her anchor. The
-strength of the squall was not alarming, but it tore up
-the sea upon these shallow banks into quick cross-running
-and angry waves, and the rain was driven in our faces so
-sharply that the drops struck like hailstones.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_310">[Pg 310]</span></p>
-
-<p>‘The only thing I fear,’ said Garbo to me, as
-we stood holding on by the foremast, ‘is for the
-frigate’s boats. There will be no great damage to anything
-else.’</p>
-
-<p>Just as he spoke, a man beside us shouted, ‘A boat! a
-boat!’ and looking forth ahead, we saw, clearly relieved
-against the whiteness of a breaking sea, one of the
-frigate’s barges coming tossing down upon us, while, almost
-at the same instant, a couple of dark sails shot, as
-it were, like dusky shadows into the faintly lighted circle
-around us, illuminated by the half-dozen lamps which, in
-imitation of the rest of the fleet, we had fixed to different
-parts of the rigging, and then in a moment, as the vessel
-which bore the canvas rose upon the crest of a sea, we all
-recognised the long, low galley which had laid the pearl
-boat aboard. She was flying along close hauled to the
-wind, the white foam beating in showers over her long
-dusky form, and sometimes over the two patches of sails
-which she carried. The boat of the frigate lay right
-athwart her track. There were two loud shouts from
-those in the boat and those in the sailing galley, then, in
-an instant, a straggling volley of musketry was shot by
-the former. The flashes illuminated the sea, showing the
-sharp and carved prow, ending in a serpent’s head, of the
-adventurous craft, and the grim faces of a cluster of men,
-who waved their hands and shook axes and cutlasses at
-the Spanish boat. Then there was a sudden order, in
-English, on board the galley, ‘Port! Hard a-port! and
-give them the stem.’ The bows an instant fell off from
-the wind, lifted on a sea, and crushed down upon the
-doomed boat, driving her under water like an eggshell,
-while, with a loud hearty hurrah, the Buccaneer swept
-past us, not three fathoms from our bowsprit, and, in a
-moment, disappeared in the night.</p>
-
-<p>‘A sail, close to astern,’ was at the moment sung out
-from the other extremity of our craft.</p>
-
-<p>‘Never mind the sail astern,’ shouted Garbo. ‘Here—ropes,
-oars, anything—there is a boat swamped ahead,
-and as he spoke, there appeared the wreck of the man<span class="pagenum" id="Page_311">[Pg 311]</span>
-of-war’s pinnace, with some of the men clinging to it,
-and others striking out amid the sea, and shouting lustily
-to us for help. A dozen of lines were flung to them at
-once, while the fat negro leaped overboard, calling to the
-struggling mariners to fear nothing. Wooroo never
-moved an inch during the whole affair, except to shake his
-woolly head when a heavier shower of spray than ordinary
-fell upon him. The Spaniards, who could most of
-them swim well, soon scrambled up our low sides, none
-the worse of their ducking. Not a man was missing,
-thanks to the aid of our little pearl diver, who had made
-directly for the wreck of the boat, and very dexterously
-lashed a couple of ropes round the only two of the crew
-who, either by being stunned in the collision, or from the
-bewilderment and suddenness of the whole affair, were
-clinging for life to the shattered boat, without having in
-the least the power of helping themselves. Such a scene
-of outcry, and swearing, and hubbub of all sorts, as the
-Spanish man-of-war’s men made when they got aboard, I
-never saw. They ran from end to end of the craft, shouting
-out, in the darkness, after the vessel which had run them
-down; roaring, by all the saints, that they would be revenged
-upon her, and that when the frigate caught her,
-they would not leave a French or English throat uncut on
-board. As for me, I deemed it politic to chime in with
-these declarations—to the great amusement of Captain
-Garbo, who was a very good fellow, and kept my secret
-like wax. When we had a little settled down—the squall
-having also fallen, and the sea getting smoother fast—the
-captain called for the man who had reported the sail
-astern, and asked him what like she was?</p>
-
-<p>‘Truly,’ said the mariner, ‘I can tell you not only
-what like she was, but what she really was—the vessel
-being no other than the bark which the Buccaneer laid
-aboard, and which no doubt she captured, for both ships
-were lying the same course—one passing ahead and the
-other astern of us.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Ay,’ said the officer of the man-of-war, shivering in
-his cold wet clothes, ‘it was the ship the scoundrels<span class="pagenum" id="Page_312">[Pg 312]</span>
-wanted, and there is no denying but they have carried
-her off very cleverly.’</p>
-
-<p>I was of the same opinion myself, and I could not but
-admire the judgment of the Buccaneers in rowing into the
-centre of the sleeping squadron, just before the outbreak
-of the squall, and then swooping off with their prey,
-in the midst of the confusion which it created. The
-weather soon cleared up. By midnight the stars were
-twinkling forth, and the frigate having worked up near
-us, we hailed that the crew of the pinnace were safe, and
-presently another boat coming on board, carried them to
-their own ship. With the earliest peep of the dawn I
-was at the mast-head of our bark. The fleet, with the
-exception of the one spirited away, were riding at their
-stations. The boats which had, yesterday evening, gone
-into the river with their cargoes, were again standing out
-for the bank. The frigate lay to windward—rising and
-falling on the froth-laced seas, with her main-topsail flat
-to the mast—but elsewhere the ocean was sailless. The
-Buccaneer and her prize, one of the largest and quickest
-vessels of the fleet, had disappeared.</p>
-
-<p>That morning, we began our proper business of collecting
-pearls, the method of which I will briefly describe.
-First, the fat negro went in the canoe to several points
-round about the vessel, diving into the water at each, and
-thus finding where the shell-fish lay thickest. This having
-been ascertained, he placed a small buoy upon the
-spot, and the bark was warped up to it. The iron-basket,
-which I have mentioned, was then let down to the bottom
-of the sea, the depth of which was hereabouts nearly five
-fathoms, or almost thirty feet. Then Wooroo and his
-comrade prepared for their day’s work, by stuffing their
-ears full of the down of the cotton-tree, without which,
-or some similar precaution, divers frequently become
-deaf. They anointed their limbs, too, with some sort of
-vegetable oil, and then taking the sinkers of lead, which I
-have spoken of, in their hands, they poised their bodies,
-standing upon the gunwale of the ship, and keeping time,
-as it were, to her roll, flinging back their arms and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_313">[Pg 313]</span>
-shoulders, and breathing deeply, so as to puff out their
-broad chests with air. Wooroo, while so standing,
-looked like a great black image of Strength. At length
-they leaped simultaneously, making but one splash, and
-as the water settled over them, we could see their black
-forms wavering and quivering, as it seemed, owing to the
-motion of the sea, and then presently clinging to the
-projections of rock, all tufted over with green sea-weed—in
-the rifts of which the oysters lay thick. As soon,
-however, as they began to tear up the latter from their
-beds, the water became so much mudded that we could
-not remark the process. In the meantime, we hauled up
-both sinkers, which the divers had let go on reaching the
-bottom, and placed them on the gunwale, all ready for
-the next plunge. The little man came up to the surface
-first—puffing and blowing. There was a sort of broad-stepped
-ladder, with three or four rounds, which was let
-down into the water, and upon one of which he sat to
-rest, basking himself in the hot sun. Wooroo did not appear
-at the surface, until I began to think that he would
-never come up at all—and said as much to Garbo.</p>
-
-<p>‘Drowned,’ said the good-tempered Spaniard; ‘that’s
-not the fate he was born to. Caramba! that fellow’s
-lungs will hold as much air as the biggest bellows that
-ever were puffed.’ And accordingly, after an unconscionable
-space of time, the negro rose, and clung to the ladder,
-his features appearing only a little swollen, and his vast
-chest heaving a little faster, as the consequences of his
-plunge. As soon as the basket was reported filled, it was
-drawn up and emptied into the deep waist, and then let
-down again. In the course of the day, another negro and
-an Indian, both expert divers, arrived from the shore to
-help us, there being generally four divers to each boat.
-Two cages were then let down together, and by nightfall,
-the bark had half her cargo on board.</p>
-
-<p>In consequence, however, of the bold attack of the
-pirate, or Buccaneer, the captain of the frigate determined
-that all the pearl fishermen should proceed together
-to the shore, and from thence back to the banks, sailing<span class="pagenum" id="Page_314">[Pg 314]</span>
-in a squadron; and as the greater number of the boats
-had their full cargoes on board, we all weighed anchor in
-company, stealing in slowly for the shore, upon a smooth
-sea glistening in the starlight. It was a fair spectacle
-that small squadron, with their white sails just sleeping
-in the light breeze, and with the great frigate, her huge
-lanterns shining over her poop like sea-beacons, and now
-and then belching forth a sheet of red spouting fire, as an
-admonition to any of the faster boats, which might appear
-to be inclined to take the lead of the rest, not to break
-the order of sailing. As we glided along, the crews of
-the barks often sang in chorus, the music being re-echoed
-and reflected as it were between the many sails
-spread out, until it appeared as if hundreds of choristers
-were joining in the burden. About midnight we crossed
-the bar of the Rio de la Hacha, the frigate remaining
-outside, and presently anchored near the shore, in a
-shallow bay, where the water was brackish. The land
-hereabouts is low and sandy, with abundance of thin-stemmed,
-narrow-leaved herbage, and few trees. The
-town is a mere assemblage of huts, kept up for the
-purpose of the pearl fishery, and inhabited by the Indians,
-being principally old men, women, and children, who
-open the oysters, under the constant superintendence of
-watchful Spanish overseers, who are there to keep a sharp
-eye upon the pearls. Notwithstanding all their care,
-however, they are very often cheated, and the most
-valuable pearls hidden and conveyed away. I had often
-opportunities while on board the fleet, and ashore in the
-ranchiera, or village, of seeing the process of opening the
-oysters. These were brought from on board the barks in
-flat-bottomed barges to the shore, whence they are
-carried in baskets, upon the heads of the Indians, to a
-sort of store-pit, or receptacle, into which they are flung.
-Close to this deposit are ranged a great many narrow
-tables, each of them consisting only of two rough planks
-set upon trestles, and shaded overhead by a roof of
-withered grass heaped upon hurdles. All along the
-tables, on one side, are ranged great lines of the Indian<span class="pagenum" id="Page_315">[Pg 315]</span>
-slaves opening the oysters, while upon the other side of
-the tables, stand the Spanish overseers, there being one
-overseer to every dozen or so of openers. When an
-Indian finds pearls, either of the large or the seed sort,
-he shouts out, and his superintendent immediately goes
-up to him, and takes charge of the precious substances,
-which he is bound in turn to give to the chief superintendent,
-who registers their size and value in an account
-book.</p>
-
-<p>The slaves are principally fed upon the meat of the
-oysters, which they prepare in a particular way, passing a
-string through a great number of oysters in the manner
-of threading beads or decorations, and then hanging the
-festoons thus made up to dry. They likewise live upon
-manatee and the flesh of wild cattle, the ranchiera being
-amply provided with hunters, whose business it is to
-supply such stores. The slaves work from sunrise to
-sunset, with about three hours intermission when the
-heat is the fiercest. They are a poor, dogged, sullen-looking
-sort of people, with long straight black hair and
-big cheek-bones. It is miserable to see them at their
-work, crouching under the whips of the overseers, not
-daring to whisper to each other nor to cease for a moment,
-but, bending down their heads over the board, and, when
-they find a pearl, calling out in a low whining tone to the
-overseer, who presently relieves them of it. I have often,
-having found occasion to be sometimes on shore during
-the day, sat upon a little sandy hillock, sheltered from
-the sun by a sort of umbrella made of plaited grass, many
-of which the Spaniards use, and gazed upon the scene.
-To seaward was the surf thundering white upon the bar,
-and almost on the horizon the pearl barks, like black
-specks, guarded by the big ship, as a little hamlet is by a
-castle. On one side the river came shining down, amid a
-waste of sand-banks and knolls, spreading out and slackening
-in its speed, as it began to feel the near influence
-of the sea. On its banks vast flocks of birds disported.
-The flamingos stood in red rows, drawn up like soldiers.
-Great cranes waded in the shallow water, like men on<span class="pagenum" id="Page_316">[Pg 316]</span>
-stilts. Ducks of many sorts flew by in long lines or in
-the shape of wedges, with a brave old drake to lead the
-fleet; while small water birds, which dive, floated upon
-the brownish river, sometimes tipping down to the bottom
-with a saucy jerk of their spruce little tails, and then
-coming up with a flutter and a quackle. By the margin,
-fixed to posts and stakes, lay a fleet of canoes, and the
-flat-bottomed boats which carried the oysters ashore;
-and here and there, lurking among the sand-hills with his
-gun, you might descry a Spanish sportsman, creeping
-along the shore to get a good shot at widgeon or teal.
-Upon the landward side there stretched out in the hot
-sun a wavy, sand-heaped shore, feathered here and there
-with a palm, bending in the sea-breeze. The village,
-which was two or three straggling streets of huts, built of
-wood and wattled branches, with some roofs scattered
-here and there of tarred canvas, which sailors call tarpaulin,
-supported upon stakes, boats’ masts, oars, and
-what not, lay, as it were, roasting brown in the fierce
-glare of the sun. A few black and stark-naked children
-played in the sand before the doors, and a Spaniard or
-two, with their white linen jackets, and broad straw hats,
-and red sashes tied round their middles, and everlasting
-pipes of tobacco in their hands, would be sitting in the
-shade, outside the long low hut which was the posada of
-the place, drinking draughts of wine from gourds or cups
-made of cocoa-shells mounted with silver, and playing
-cards or dice for shining dollars. At one end of the
-village was a rude sort of fort, built of unhewn stone,
-piled up and supported by a framework of stakes; it had
-no cannon, but was loopholed for musketry, and was set
-all round with sentry-boxes, in which Spanish soldiers
-dozed away the greater part of the day and night. Above
-the ramparts or palisades, which were not more than
-twelve feet high, and planted upon the roof of an inner
-house, rose a flag-staff bearing the broad red and yellow
-banner of Spain. In this fort, or stockade, lived the
-governor of the fishery, the chief superintendent, and
-the captain of the convoy, when he was ashore. All the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_317">[Pg 317]</span>
-pearls which were found were conveyed thither twice
-a-day, and overseers were continually passing and repassing
-from the great gate down to the opening tables,
-which stood in divers ranks all round the central pit into
-which the oysters were flung. From among those tables,
-half covered by their thin roofs of grass and hurdles, and
-lined by the dusky rows of working slaves, continually
-came the sharp crack of the whip, followed by a loud
-howl from some poor wretch detected whispering to his
-neighbour, or pausing a moment in his toil. Now and
-then an Indian would run hurriedly away from the tables
-towards the village, that man having found and delivered
-up a pearl above a certain weight, which entitled him to
-a holiday until the next morning; while, again, perhaps
-a poor brown devil would be walked off between a couple
-of the soldiers who attended at the tables, and taken to
-the fort, there to be flogged to an inch of his life for some
-offence given to the overseer of the board.</p>
-
-<p>Such, then, is a true picture of the pearl ranchiera, on
-the banks of the Bio de la Hacha. Meanwhile, days, and
-weeks, and at last months, slipped away, and I found
-myself no nearer my design of getting on board an
-English ship than when I left Carthagena. I went off
-every day in the pearl bark, and many an anxious look I
-cast to windward for a sail. One or two I saw, but at a
-great distance, and they did not seem inclined to come
-nearer. Indeed, the frigate being put upon its mettle by
-the recent attack, the governor of the fishery having, as I
-heard, rated the captain soundly for not keeping a better
-look out—the frigate, I say, was very vigilant, generally
-keeping to windward of the fleet; and when we remained
-all night at our anchors, burning blue lights and other
-fireworks constantly, and having all her heavy boats, with
-their crews armed to the teeth, rowing guard through
-and around the squadron, from sundown to sunrise,
-like most vigilant watchmen. Thus I did not think it
-probable that any privateer, excepting, indeed, a ship of
-great size, would dare to attack a fleet so guarded. So I
-considered myself almost as much a prisoner as when in<span class="pagenum" id="Page_318">[Pg 318]</span>
-the house of the Señora Moranté at Carthagena, and with
-as little prospect of speedy release. I panted for the
-sound of my countrymen’s voices again, and often and
-often did I start from my sleep, dreaming I heard Stout
-Jem’s hearty talk, or Nicky Hamstring’s cheery laugh.
-Thus I got downhearted and mopish enough, and often
-thought of purchasing from Captain Garbo, for I was not—thanks
-to my friends at Carthagena—penniless, the
-canoe belonging to the bark, and taking my chance in her
-to run down before the trades to the Samballas. Indeed,
-the unpleasantness of my situation increased day by day.
-Although I spoke Spanish reasonably well, and put great
-restraint upon my speech, so as never to drop a hint or a
-word which might betray my secret, I saw that I was
-suspected, and two or three times I thought it best to
-retreat as rapidly as I could from the lowering brows and
-fishing questions which the crews of the other barks, and
-sometimes the soldiers on shore, received me with. At
-length, one evening, when, much against my own will, I
-had accompanied Captain Garbo to the posada, so many
-hints were dropped about ‘spies,’ and ‘sailing under false
-colours,’ and so many interrogatories were put to me,
-touching the Spanish ships in which I had sailed, and the
-ports from which they set forth, that I made up my mind
-to take the very first opportunity of leaving my present
-comrades. Captain Garbo, who being a good deal heated
-by wine, must needs defend me with great warmth, and
-tell many lies in his zeal, each lie being, as is generally
-the case, quite inconsistent with the other, made the
-matter worse instead of better; and half-a-dozen times,
-just as the talk was turning upon something else, he
-would start up, and flourishing a knife in his pot-valiancy,
-would threaten that any man who said I was not a good
-comrade and a good fellow, should brook the stab. Now,
-among the company was one man to whom I took a
-special dislike, because he encouraged Garbo with all his
-might to defend me, at the same time dropping hints that
-I stood in need of the utmost eloquence which my protector
-could exert, and all the time slily laughing in his<span class="pagenum" id="Page_319">[Pg 319]</span>
-sleeve at both of us. This man was a squat, broad-shouldered
-little fellow, with a greasy, threadbare doublet,
-and a cunning-looking weasen face, lighted up by two
-bright winking eyes. He never seemed to me to sit a
-moment in the same position, but was always shifting
-about and fidgeting, and speaking here and there, to
-almost every one at once. This man, whom the rest
-called Señor Peralta, was, they told me, a merchant who
-came hither every year at the pearl season to purchase
-pearls of the chief officer of the fishery. He had a large
-half-decked piragua of his own, and was accounted by
-the Spaniards as a very adventurous and clever fellow;
-and being liberal with his money, and always ready to
-treat the commoner sort of men, as well as to sing merry
-songs, and crack merry jokes over his liquor, this Señor
-Peralta was quite a great personage in the ranchiera.
-The evening of which I am talking, I often observed his
-eyes fixed with an intent look upon me, and once or
-twice, as I judged, he made a sign with his hands, but
-what he meant I could not for the life of me divine.
-Next day, some accident—what it was I forget—prevented
-Captain Garbo taking his bark out to the bank,
-and so having nothing to do, I went wandering, low-hearted
-enough, among the sand-banks and knolls of grass
-down by the sea. At length, seeing a comfortable shade
-formed by some thick bushes, which kept off the sun, but
-let the sea-breeze whistle through, I sat me down, and
-began to think upon my project of obtaining a canoe, and
-chancing the run to the Samballas. While I was thus
-musing, I suddenly started to hear a voice near me
-singing softly; and I started again, and a thrill of
-pleasure went through my veins, when I recognised the
-words of the song for English. Almost afraid that I was
-dreaming, and fearing to awake, I listened while the
-musician, who appeared to lie concealed among the
-bushes behind me, sang with a clear, lusty voice these
-verses, which I remembered to have heard in the playhouses
-in London:—</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_320">[Pg 320]</span></p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry fs80">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">‘Sir Drake, whom well the world’s end knew,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Which thou did compass round,</div>
- <div class="verse indent1">And whom both poles of heaven once saw,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Which north and south do bound.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">‘The starres alone would make thee knowne</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">If men were silent here;</div>
- <div class="verse indent1">The sun himselfe cannot forget</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">His fellow-travellere!’</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>The song being ended, I turned hastily round, exclaiming
-aloud—‘A countryman—a friend!’ And at the
-same time the bushes being rustled aside, out of them
-popped the grinning face of Señor Peralta! I staggered
-back with wonder, while the pearl-merchant called out,
-in good English—</p>
-
-<p>‘Truly a young bird, and to be caught with the veriest
-chaff! Why, man, thou art a pretty dissembler indeed,
-when thou canst not hear the butt-end of an old ballad
-of our country, without leaping and bellowing like a
-moon-calf. I can tell thee, that had I been as unwary, I
-should have danced from the end of a halter aboard
-yonder frigate, long ago!’</p>
-
-<p>By this time, I was recovered from my surprise, and
-running up to Peralta, assisted him to scramble out of
-the bushes, beseeching him at the same time to explain
-to me this mystery, and tell me what he was. Before
-answering one word, however, he led me quite away from
-the cover of the bushes, down to the seaside. ’ Where I
-was hidden,’ he said, ‘another can hide—the open beach
-keeps safer counsel.’ Then sitting down upon a great
-stone—the surf almost coming up to our feet—</p>
-
-<p>‘I suspected you for an Englishman,’ quoth he, ‘the
-first day I saw you. And last night I took the liberty
-of making myself quite sure. I don’t think you liked
-the process. But I am an old hand in these matters,
-and he must understand his business well, who makes me
-believe falsely that what he seems he is. Now, just tell
-me candidly how you came here, and perhaps I may help
-you to what I am pretty sure you want, and that is a
-means of getting quit of our friends in the ranchiera
-yonder.’</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_321">[Pg 321]</span></p>
-
-<p>I acknowledged that he had divined my thoughts, as
-well as he had penetrated my disguise; and so, in a few
-words, imparted to him some outline of my story. He
-heard me out very attentively; and then says he—</p>
-
-<p>‘If I were you, I would go to Jamaica, and claim my
-property.’</p>
-
-<p>‘What property?’ I said, in amazement.</p>
-
-<p>‘Why,’ quoth he, ‘have you not heard of the fate of
-the Carthagena galleon? She was taken two days’ sail
-from the coast by a privateer schooner, which I understand
-to be no other than yours—the Will-o’-the-Wisp.
-It was the richest prize that hath been captured in these
-seas for many a year. The privateer sailed with her into
-Port Royal, in Jamaica; and as you say that the captain is
-a staunch-hearted fellow; and as Mr. Pratt, whom I know
-to be a very honest gentleman, is concerned in the matter,
-I do not doubt but that your share of the adventure, to
-which you are fully entitled, and which must be very
-considerable, will be duly accounted for to you.’</p>
-
-<p>This was great news indeed. I only lamented that I
-had not been on board in the action, but the pearl merchant,
-who, it seems, had got his information from those
-who had spoken with the mariners of the galleon, after
-they landed on the main coast, being sent back in their
-boats by the privateers—my pearl merchant, I say, told
-me that the Spaniards having been boarded in the night,
-and when they were in no posture of defence, had made
-next to no resistance, and that the galleon had been very
-easily secured. Of course, this intelligence made me
-doubly anxious to make my way to Jamaica, or to any
-port where I could regain my comrades, and I eagerly
-asked my new friend whether he could not put me in the
-way of getting thither.</p>
-
-<p>‘Why,’ says he, ‘if I could not, I shouldn’t have made
-myself known to you at all, but the truth is, that I need
-your services as a seaman. I have got a very large
-decked piragua—you may see her masts as she lies there
-in the river—in which I have, as I may say, sailed the
-whole Caribbean Sea. This trip, however, I have been<span class="pagenum" id="Page_322">[Pg 322]</span>
-unfortunate, having lost a very good fellow—a negro—my
-prime seaman, who died about a month ago of the
-small-pox. I have but two men slaves of my own left
-with me, and I was thinking where I could get a good
-fourth hand, who knew somewhat about the sea, when
-fortune sends you to my aid.’</p>
-
-<p>I protested my willingness to serve him, and we had a
-long discourse together. He told me that he was an
-Englishman by birth, but that his father was a Spaniard
-and his mother a Frenchwoman. Thus, he said, he had
-learned from his earliest youth, a smattering of all the
-three languages, and having lived long in London, Paris
-and Cadiz, in after years, pursuing his craft of a jeweller
-and goldsmith, he had very little difficulty, when need
-was, in passing himself off for a native either of England,
-France, or Spain. For some years back he had been, he
-told me, sailing about the West Indies, trafficking in precious
-stones and gold. He had no fixed place of abode.</p>
-
-<p>‘Sometimes,’ quoth he, ‘I kneel very piously at mass,
-and make the sign of the cross, in the great cathedral at
-Havannah—and then I am as grave a Spaniard as the Cid.
-Again, I shall sing and dance at a merry-making in
-Tortuga—and, there, credit me, I bear a heart as light
-and as French as ever did the good king of Yvetot.
-Anon, I shall drink and shout with our good friends,
-Archemboe, Davis, and the rest at Port Royal, and not a
-bully of them all but shall swear I am as bluff a Briton
-as jolly King Hal!’</p>
-
-<p>I then intimated my hopes, that his trade so venturously
-conducted was a profitable one.</p>
-
-<p>‘As for that,’ quoth he, ‘what with my poor efforts in
-the New World, and the exertions of my good correspondents
-at divers courts in Europe, I thank the stars
-that there is more than one imperial regalia the wearer
-of which oweth me more, perchance, than he will ever
-pay. But I am not exacting. When a sensible man
-deals with kings, if he does not get money, he can always
-have money’s worth.’</p>
-
-<p>This speech the pearl merchant, or jeweller, delivered<span class="pagenum" id="Page_323">[Pg 323]</span>
-with abundance of nods and winks and shrugs, as though
-there were many meanings in it, out of which I was welcome
-to take my own. Then he whispered—</p>
-
-<p>‘If you would have gold cheap, know the miners. If
-you would have pearls cheap, make much of the divers.
-Deal at the fountain—go to the well-head—the well-head,
-my son!’</p>
-
-<p>At this he laughed very complacently, and I thought
-it best to laugh too, although for my life I could not
-fathom the meaning of the riddling words which the man
-spoke, and which he accompanied with so many expressive
-shrugs of the shoulders and grotesque leers, that I was
-as much puzzled by what I saw, as by what I heard.
-All at once, however, he broke off, and said, plainly
-enough—</p>
-
-<p>‘Now we know each other sufficiently for the present.
-My time for remaining in this oystery part of the world
-will be over in two or three days, and I presume that you
-will have no objections to ship in my piragua, and take
-the chances of the sea to Port Royal?’</p>
-
-<p>Of course I engaged to be ready at a moment’s warning,
-and we were about to part, when he said suddenly—</p>
-
-<p>‘I have little to do this evening, and I suppose you
-have less. Come and sup with me. Any one will show
-you the hut of Peralta, the poor pearl merchant. Come
-at ten.’ These words he spoke with one of his habitual
-leers and shrugs. I promised very readily, and then
-Señor Peralta walked away demurely, counting his beads.</p>
-
-<p>I lost no time in communicating to Captain Garbo
-that I had now an opportunity of shortly getting a passage
-to one of the English islands. He was very desirous
-to know how I had managed it; but upon that head I
-would give him no satisfaction.</p>
-
-<p>‘Well,’ quoth he at last, ‘so be it, Señor Lindsay; but
-I say, the first time you and your comrades take a Spanish
-bark, be lenient to my countrymen; be as merciful as
-you can to their goods and chattels for the sake of old
-Manuel Garbo, the pearl fisher.’</p>
-
-<p>At ten o’clock exactly I took my way over the sandy<span class="pagenum" id="Page_324">[Pg 324]</span>
-beach to Peralta’s hut, which stood a little apart from
-the other buildings, towards the landward extremity of
-the ranchiera. As I plodded along, sometimes tripping
-over mounds of oysters; sometimes stopping to look to
-seaward, where all the lights of the pearl squadron
-glimmered as the fleet sailed towards the shore, I suddenly
-heard a loud outcry, in which I could distinguish the
-yells of an Indian, and the gruff voices of Spaniards high
-in oath, and who, I conjectured, from the clash of arms,
-were soldiers. In a minute or two I saw faintly a dusky
-group of people, whites and Indians, some of them carrying
-lanterns, which gleamed on drawn swords and
-bayonets. The men bearing them disappeared through
-the principal gate of the fort, and then the Indians, who
-were left outside, raised the most pitiable cries and howls,
-until they were threatened by the sentries, and told they
-would be fired upon if they did not disperse. As I was
-somewhat late, I did not stop to inquire into the cause of
-the tumult, but I judged that it was probably occasioned
-by the arrest of an Indian who had committed some
-crime; perhaps, as was very common, stolen or secreted
-a valuable pearl. However, I did not think much of the
-matter, and soon arrived at Peralta’s hut. It was a large
-house as compared with most of its neighbours, fenced
-all around with walls formed of double lines of strong
-tough stakes, the space between them being filled up
-with stones gathered apparently from the sea beach. On
-knocking, I was admitted by Peralta himself, who led
-the way into a small room, with walls roughly built of wood
-and stone, through which the starlight was shining at
-many cracks and crevices, and mingling with the smoky
-glimmer of a great brass lamp. The place contained but
-the most ordinary sort of furniture—a hammock hung in
-a corner, an oiled bag for holding clothes, a table, and
-two or three small chairs, or rather large stools. The
-table, however, was laid out for supper, and showed a
-capital repast of fish, flesh, and fowl, while a couple of
-flasks, with slim necks, and all cob-webbed and begrimed,
-as though they had long lain deep in a well-stocked cellar,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_325">[Pg 325]</span>
-made a curious contrast to the cracked crockery and
-wooden platters, and hacked and broken knives and forks
-which lay beside them.</p>
-
-<p>‘You see,’ quoth Peralta, ‘that, though I may have
-dealings with kings, I don’t by any means live in a
-palace. There are idle vanities and substantial vanities,
-my friend. Diamonds and pearls, laces and gildings,
-brocades and velvets, are of the former class; but good
-meats to eat, and good wines to drink, are of the latter.
-Now you see I am an admirer of the substantial vanities.
-I love to feed upon the daintiest morsel, though it be
-picked up with a broken one-pronged fork, and I love to
-drink the choicest vintage of Rhine or Rhone, without at
-all caring whether I put my lips to a golden cup which
-Benvenuto hath wrought, or to a calabash which Quako
-hath scooped before supper.’</p>
-
-<p>So saying, the pearl merchant started the cork from
-one of the flasks, and I tasted certainly the most delicious
-draught which ever tingled on my palate.</p>
-
-<p>‘Ha!’ quoth my entertainer, as I held out the empty
-cup to be refilled, ‘you find that better than even
-the most skilful compound of rye brandy and bilge
-water. <em>C’est bien alors</em>—you have a palate, which I
-grieve to say many gentlemen of your kind and profession
-possess not, preferring the hot strong drinks of
-Jamaica, and Tortugas taverns, even, to such adorable
-nectar as this. Why, man, hold out thy glass again, the
-grand Louis himself cannot fish up a choicer flask from
-the most sacred crypt beneath the marble pavements of
-Versailles.’</p>
-
-<p>Talking in this way—relating to me strange anecdotes
-touching great generals and statesmen, and even kings,
-with whom my host, to believe his words, had held
-familiar converse, and the moral of all these stories
-being, that the generals and statesmen and kings in
-question were as stupid, and as easily to be gulled and
-laughed at, as mere ordinary mortals—the supper and
-one of the wine flasks were soon despatched. Then,
-placing the fragments in a corner, Peralta produced a<span class="pagenum" id="Page_326">[Pg 326]</span>
-sort of purse or bag of filigree workmanship, in bright
-silver, and which seemed to be the only thing of price in
-his dwelling—always excepting the meats and wines—and
-taking from it some tobacco of most delicate savour,
-we began to smoke and discuss the second bottle, which
-was of a different kind from the first, the wine being of a
-deep rich red tinge, and coming, as he told me, from
-Dijon, in Burgundy.</p>
-
-<p>While we sat thus, my entertainer took almost all the
-conversation to himself. He spoke of things new and
-strange to me: of the crown jewels of mighty potentates
-pledged to rich Hebrews dwelling in the filthy back lanes
-of the cities of Europe—in the Jewry of London, the
-Judenstrasse of Frankfort, and the Ghetto of Rome.</p>
-
-<p>‘And your brave Christian goes past, stopping his
-nose for the savours of fish fried in oil, and elbowing and
-jostling the hook-nosed, shabby old men who make way,
-with many a ‘Give you good e’en, my lord;’ and ‘Faugh!’
-says he, ‘these stinking unbelievers; why be they not
-packed bodily off to their holy city again’—and so
-passes he by, to kneel, and cringe, and kiss the king’s
-hand; while all the time—ha! ha! ha!—that very king
-is thinking and pondering in his small mind how best he
-can squeeze the next subsidy out of his faithful cities and
-towns, and so release the brightest jewel in the regalia,
-now held in pawn by old Isaac, or old Jacob, or old
-Abraham, the very dirtiest, raggedest, yellowest-skinned
-and hookedest-nosed of the whole brotherhood—ha! ha!
-ha!’</p>
-
-<p>The pearl merchant said this with so much gusto, and
-laughed with so much glee, that I began to think he
-must be one of the fraternity himself. He seemed to
-divine my thoughts, for, as if I had spoken them, he, as
-it were, replied—</p>
-
-<p>‘No, no, no! Señor Buccaneer, although I have much
-traffic with the seed of Abraham, I am none of their
-kindred; were I such, I would be wiser than to come
-here to live in a sty on this scorching coast, driving hard
-bargains for sick oysters.’</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_327">[Pg 327]</span></p>
-
-<p>My entertainer then went on with his stories of
-European courts, and I was listening with open mouth,
-as he told, with many a quip and many a sneer, how,
-under the guidance of one Chiffinch, he had one night
-passed up the back stairs at Whitehall to hold a secret interview
-with Louise de Querailles, since Duchess of Portsmouth,
-touching certain jewels which it was convenient
-to raise money upon until there should come a remittance
-from the court of Versailles, through Monseigneur
-Barillon, the ambassador of Louis; when all at once
-there came a loud rap, accompanied by a shrill whistle, at
-the door. Peralta started quickly up, but without appearing
-at all discomposed, and opening the door with speed, a
-handsome fellow, a mulatto, dressed like a sailor, bounded
-in, exclaiming at the same moment, in a loud whisper:</p>
-
-<p>‘Juan and Blanco are both detected!’</p>
-
-<p>Then seeing me, he stopped as suddenly as though he
-had been shot. But Peralta speedily reassured him.</p>
-
-<p>‘Go on, man; go on. He who standeth there is my
-friend; he is one of us. Go on. Have they confessed?’</p>
-
-<p>‘All,’ replied the mulatto. ‘They first told the truth,
-and then a great deal more than the truth, in hopes the
-better to save their necks. I squeezed in with them
-into the fort, and heard it all. The soldiers are coming.
-I heard the order given.’</p>
-
-<p>Peralta stood still for a moment, and then said hurriedly,
-‘Doth it blow?’</p>
-
-<p>The mulatto replied, that there was a light air only,
-from the eastward.</p>
-
-<p>‘With the tide two hours on the ebb. That will do
-well. Disco is on board the piragua?’</p>
-
-<p>The mulatto nodded eagerly. Peralta turned to me—‘I
-suppose,’ quoth he, ‘you have no objection to make a
-start of it this very hour?’</p>
-
-<p>‘None, none,’ I replied; wondering with my whole soul
-at the meaning of this strange scene.</p>
-
-<p>‘Follow me, then, and do as I do,’ replied Peralta.
-He swallowed his last cup of wine, and smiled when he
-saw me copying his example to the letter. Then, blowing<span class="pagenum" id="Page_328">[Pg 328]</span>
-the lamp out, we all three sallied forth into the
-night, walking quickly but cautiously amongst the
-scattered huts. I knew that it was no time for questions,
-so put none, though I was almost bursting with
-curiosity. In a minute or two we heard the measured
-tramp of soldiers advancing, and presently the clash of
-their arms and the gleam of their lamps burst forth
-together as they marched round the corner of a small
-street, followed by a great many Indians. There was a
-hollow place close by where we stood, with ridges of
-oyster shells on either side. Into this Peralta sank
-suddenly, flinging himself flat upon the ground, while the
-mulatto and I followed his example. In a minute the
-soldiers marched by, with their attendant rout of Indians
-gabbling and chattering very eagerly.</p>
-
-<p>‘Now,’ quoth Peralta, ‘for the beach, and make as
-little noise as you can in running.’</p>
-
-<p>With these words off he set, going over the ground
-much faster than to look at him I should have thought
-possible. However, the mulatto and I kept close behind
-him, meeting nobody, although we heard a distant tumult
-of voices in the ranchiera, and the tramp of people running
-hither and thither. There were half a dozen skiffs
-and canoes moored to as many stakes rising from a small
-slippery jetty, and sheering backwards and forwards as
-the current of the ebbing tide ran swiftly beneath them.
-Into the outermost of these skiffs Peralta leaped as
-nimbly and steadily as if he had been a waterman at
-Whitehall Stairs, we following closely upon his heels;
-but just as we had, as by instinct, sat down to the oars,
-Peralta cried out to us to hold, and then stepping back
-upon the jetty, very coolly cast loose the painters of the
-whole of the remainder of the boats from their fastenings,
-and gathering the ends of the ropes together, as a
-coachman does his reins, he shuffled back again into the
-stern sheets, casting off our moorings as he passed by,
-and then, with a low chuckle to himself, we pushed off
-and rowed into the stream, the squadron of boats following
-in our wake.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_329">[Pg 329]</span></p>
-
-<p>‘Pull away, my good fellows,’ Peralta then said, taking
-an oar out of one of the skiffs behind us, ‘I will steer
-you.’ Our course was down the stream, and we swept
-along very rapidly, while, looking back, we could see, by
-the lights which came dancing all down the beach from
-the houses, that the Spaniards were in hard pursuit. In
-a minute more a cluster of these lanterns shone upon the
-jetty, and instantly their bearers raised a clamour and
-shouting that all the boats were gone. Señor Peralta
-only laughed to himself.</p>
-
-<p>‘Well,’ he muttered in a moment or two, ‘it is a
-shabby way to leave old friends, but needs must when
-the devil or an angry Spaniard drives.’</p>
-
-<p>All this time we were shooting swiftly down the river,
-the broad surface of which, gleaming in the starlight,
-now began to heave and undulate, as the swells of the
-sea, rolling over the bar, affected it. As we pulled,
-Peralta, taking advantage of a great shout faintly heard
-from the shore, hailed, ‘Disco! Disco, ahoy!’</p>
-
-<p>A long shrill whistle was the reply, and, looking round,
-we saw the low dusky form of the piragua, with her two
-high raking masts, and, pausing on our oars, we heard
-the rush of the tide against her sharp bows.</p>
-
-<p>‘Disco is all awake,’ said Peralta, and in a moment
-more we were alongside and tumbling into the piragua,
-which, notwithstanding her very considerable size, was so
-light as to rock violently as, one by one, we leaped over
-her gunwale.</p>
-
-<p>Disco himself, a Mosquito Indian, as I judged
-him, appeared to have been just aroused by the
-clamour on shore, and he asked eagerly what the matter
-was.</p>
-
-<p>‘The matter,’ said Peralta, ‘is, that we must get to
-sea as soon as we can. Thank God the breeze comes
-fresher—that puff quite ruffled the water. Jenipa,’ this
-was to the mulatto, ‘jump forward and cut the cable—no
-time for weighing. Disco, get a sweep or an oar out
-on the larboard bows to cant her head round. Lindsay,
-bear a hand, my man, and get the canvas upon her, or<span class="pagenum" id="Page_330">[Pg 330]</span>
-some of our friends ashore will be swimming down upon
-us with their knives in their teeth.’</p>
-
-<p>The coolness of Peralta was capital to see. Just as
-Jenipa’s knife went with a cheep through the strands of
-the hemp, Disco’s oar dashed into the water, and the
-stream catching the larboard bows of the piragua, she
-swung round with her head towards the shore we had
-just left, while Peralta, who worked as though he had
-been afloat all his life, flung loose the foresail from the
-long supple bamboo yard, and then both of us clapping
-on to the haulyards with all our might, the light canvas,
-all dripping with the night dew, rose steadily to the top
-of the mast, and then catching the faint puff of the sea
-breeze, which has but little power when it blows in the
-night-time, the sail swelled gracefully out, while Peralta,
-with the sheet in his hand, leaped aft, catching hold of
-the tiller, and calling to us all to get the mainsail upon
-the piragua. We were, as the reader may guess, in no
-humour for trifling, and accordingly the big lugsail was
-very soon hoisted by rapid jerks, up the mast, and when,
-after having made fast the haulyards, and trimmed the
-sheet aft, I paused a moment and looked round, I was
-quite bewildered. The breeze was hardly sufficient to
-keep the wide sails sleeping. I heard no loud rushing
-gurgle, such as a vessel makes travelling fast through the
-water; yet the lights upon shore were flying by us as
-though we were borne on horseback towards the sea—the
-great white flakes and stripes of froth which had floated
-into the river from the bar, glanced past, showing like light
-veins and streaks in dark marble—while the skiffs which
-Peralta had cut loose were almost out of sight astern.</p>
-
-<p>I uttered an exclamation of wonder, at which Peralta
-laughed pleasantly.</p>
-
-<p>‘Your Will-o’-the-Wisp may be fast, Señor Buccaneer,’
-he said, ‘but no craft that ever came off the stocks
-of European ship-builders will sail with the boats which
-the Indians—savages we call them—can scoop with rude
-tools out of a single glorious tree. Do we not move like
-an apparition—a sea spirit? Let the Spaniards chase us<span class="pagenum" id="Page_331">[Pg 331]</span>
-in their clumsy wooden boxes, the piragua will earn her
-right to her name though all the navy of Old and New
-Spain were flashing in her wake. I call her the “Ghost;”
-does not she glide like one fleeting to the sepulchre at
-the first glimpse of the light of the morning?’</p>
-
-<p>I looked at Peralta, beginning to suspect that the
-sudden flurry, coming after the humming wine, caused
-him to vapour a little—but, if it were so, he very soon
-came to himself.</p>
-
-<p>‘Hark!’ said Disco, ‘the surf on the bar.’</p>
-
-<p>‘And see,’ added Jenipa, ‘the lights of the Pearl Fleet
-close to in the offing.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Forward, and look out, both of you,’ cried Peralta,
-sharply. ‘Keep your eyes open on either bow.’</p>
-
-<p>Meantime I crouched down by the steersman on the
-weather-quarter. The lofty lights of the frigate were
-much further to sea than the squadron she guarded.
-Indeed, the great ship cared not for approaching too
-closely the many banks and spits of sand, which run out
-from the bar, and over which most of the smaller barks
-could float very well. The leading ships, however, appeared
-to be as close to the bar on one side as we were
-on the other.</p>
-
-<p>‘Now,’ said Peralta, ‘grant that the stupidity of those
-fellows on shore will keep them from making any signal
-to their comrades out at sea.’ But the words were hardly
-out of his mouth, when the water and the sky were lit
-up with a mighty flash, and the loud report of a great
-gun—a small battery of which was planted before the
-fort—came rolling down the river; and immediately
-afterwards a straggling volley of small arms rattled all
-along the bank, as though the soldiers were dispersed and
-running down towards the sea. By this time, the white
-water on the bar was close ahead.</p>
-
-<p>‘Starboard—starboard. Keep her a little away, master,
-the channel is on the lee-bow,’ cried Disco. The course
-of the piragua was altered accordingly, and glancing
-ahead, I saw the streak of dark water, leading to the
-open sea; at the same time that the fleet of pearl fishers<span class="pagenum" id="Page_332">[Pg 332]</span>
-answered the alarm from ashore, by kindling torches,
-waving lanterns, and shouting and blowing horns, just as
-they had done the night that the privateer had swooped
-down in the centre of them, and carried off one of the
-very best in his clutch. At this moment, we having
-drawn clear of the sand hills on shore, the breeze
-freshened, sweeping down the coast, heavy with the dew
-of the night air. The light sails swelled stiffly out, the
-sheets tautened, the thin supple masts swayed and creaked,
-and the few ropes which stayed them upon the weather-side
-stretched out as rigid as iron-bars. And yet the
-piragua flew by every swell which rolled in from the
-offing—not plunging into the great green seas, and flashing
-the foam sparklingly up into the air, but moving
-rather like a bird, which, with spreading and far-stretched
-pinion, just glances over the sea, rather flying than swimming—borne
-more by the winds than the waves. Truly,
-I had never sailed in so wonderfully-fashioned a craft—so
-thin and slight was her construction, that she appeared,
-as it were, to yield, and bend, and quiver in the seas—but
-ever on, gaily and lightsomely, she went, sliding, as
-it were, without noise and without shock, leaping with a
-quick, buoyant, bounding motion, right over and over
-the swells, which now, as the water shoaled upon the bar,
-began to roll by us, white with milky foam. Verily,
-Peralta did well when he likened his piragua to a noiseless
-gliding ghost.</p>
-
-<p>While I was still wrapped in amazement at the performances
-of the canoe, she was flying across the bar in
-the very midst of the fleet of pearl fishers. The whole
-thing passed over me like a vision—a dream of flashing
-foaming water, plunging and dripping ships, with their
-canvas flapping, and their booms, and yards, and ropes,
-creaking and moaning, and rattling together—of fierce,
-eager faces, and hurrying, dusky forms, running on the
-decks, leaping into the riggings, flashing their torches
-and lanterns; shouting, yelling, and hailing the piragua
-and Peralta to lie to, and put about—and some of them
-flourishing glimmering knives and firing pistols in the air.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_333">[Pg 333]</span></p>
-
-<p>All this, I say, appeared to pass by me like a vision, or
-a dream—and it only lasted for a few brief moments—for
-the piragua, which was steered in a fashion which
-made me look upon Peralta as a sailor rather than a merchant,
-flew through the panic-struck squadron, who could
-no more catch her, than they could the shadow of her
-tall sails upon the water. Once, and once only, a heavy
-hook or grapnel, attached to a stout line, was flung by a
-lusty arm, and lighted in the piragua’s fore-rigging, but
-even before the rope had tightened, Disco leaped to the
-spot, his knife flashed, the severed hemp fell back into
-the sea, and the useless iron tumbled down into the
-bottom of the canoe. The next moment we were fairly
-at sea, with the whole of the squadron, save one or two
-loiterers, behind us. Just then the frigate, who was a
-couple of miles or so in the offing, fired a heavy cannon,
-and showed a number of lights, by which we saw swarms
-of men, rushing from the high carved bulwarks into the
-rigging, as if they designed to make sail in all haste.</p>
-
-<p>‘Ho! ho! ho!’ laughed Peralta. ‘Here comes the
-elephant chasing the weasel, and the elephant thinks
-that the best way to begin the race is to roar a little.’</p>
-
-<p>And, indeed, any attempt of the big ship to follow us
-would have been just about as hopeless a chase as that to
-which Peralta had likened it. So, after firing a few more
-guns, whether with shot in them or not we neither knew
-nor cared, she stood cautiously in for the bar of the river,
-sending her boats before her, as we conjectured, to learn
-the cause of all the uproar. Meantime we had struck a
-light, keeping the lantern, however, well masked, and
-then setting the head of the boat about nor-nor-west,
-that being as near the wind as we could lie, and at the
-same time make good way through the water, we trimmed
-the sails neatly, and cried, ‘Northward Ho! for Jamaica.’</p>
-
-<p>For about an hour, during which time little was
-spoken, Peralta held the helm. He then called us all
-round him, and apportioned the watches in the ordinary
-seaman fashion—I being placed with Disco, and he taking
-his turn of duty with Jenipa. This settled, we tossed<span class="pagenum" id="Page_334">[Pg 334]</span>
-up whose watch should begin first, and it falling to the
-turn of Disco and myself, Peralta gave me the helm,
-instructing me, as I was not well acquainted with the
-management of piraguas, to call him if the wind freshened
-so much as to seem to demand the taking in of a reef.
-Then creeping beneath the half-deck, which extended
-from the bows to abaft the foremast, he coiled himself up
-along with Jenipa, and the pair went very quietly to
-sleep. During our watch, which was tranquil, I tried to
-obtain some information from the Indian touching the
-habits and pursuits of his master, and also relating to the
-causes of our very sudden departure. But the fellow,
-although he would talk glibly enough upon the weather,
-or the piragua, or the manner of our escape, was as close
-as wax as regarded everything else. Indeed, he reminded
-me very truly that I ought to know more about the
-reason of our departure than he, having come from the
-shore, while he had been sleeping on board the piragua.
-At that I told him what I had heard from Jenipa, about
-Juan and Blanco having been detected and taken to the
-fort, where they had confessed not only the truth, but, as
-I had heard, more than the truth. The Mosquito man
-merely shrugged his shoulders, and said he could make
-nothing of it, although I saw very well, by the intelligent
-look of the fellow’s face, as the binnacle lamp shone upon
-his bronzed features, that he understood much more of
-the matter than he chose to confess. Finding I could
-make nothing of the Indian, I set myself to consider the
-whole affair, and putting Peralta’s hints about the way to
-get pearls cheap, in connexion with what I had actually
-witnessed and heard, I was not long in arriving at the
-conclusion, that, in all probability, for every pearl which
-the merchant bought of the captain of the fishery, he
-obtained another, and at a very considerably cheaper
-rate, by dealing quietly with the openers themselves, to
-which class I concluded that Juan and Blanco must
-belong. This solution of the riddle seemed the more
-probable, when I remembered much that I had heard
-touching the great number of pearls supposed to be<span class="pagenum" id="Page_335">[Pg 335]</span>
-secreted by the Indians, in spite of the utmost vigilance
-of the Spaniards. Jamaica sloops had, I knew, ere now
-gone to hover near the Rio de la Hacha, having their
-agents and correspondents, in various disguises, lurking
-upon the coast, and of course keeping up communication
-with the Indian divers and openers; but the adroitness
-and courage shown by Peralta in living as a Spaniard
-openly amongst Spaniards, and supporting the character
-of a regular pearl merchant, communicating with the
-captain of the fishery, while in reality he was driving the
-best part of his trade by underhand dealing with the
-Indians, conducted, no doubt, at great and constant risk
-of detection and death; all this inspired me with no
-small respect for the abilities and the nerve of the owner
-of the piragua. Then I thought with what cool generalship
-he had conducted the retreat, not losing a moment
-by delay, yet taking his measures with as great composure
-and deliberation as if he were departing upon a pleasure
-cruise. Afterwards, I began to wonder that I had not
-observed him, when leaving the hut, take with him the
-amount of pearls which I felt sure that he must have
-amassed; but a few minutes’ reflection convinced me,
-from the perfect unconcern with which he had walked
-out of the hut, not caring to pick up any one article of
-those strewn about, that all the valuables which he possessed
-on shore, he carried constantly concealed about
-his person. Indeed, in the matter of such costly toys as
-pearls, or precious stones, a man’s own garments formed
-by far the safest depository to be found in the ranchiera.</p>
-
-<p>While brooding over these things, the night passed
-silently away. With the grey dawn, Peralta relieved me,
-and we crept in our turn under the half-deck, and slept
-until the sun rose high into the unclouded heaven, and
-the piragua was staggering along under reefed canvas,
-bending over to the whistling trade-wind, and leaping
-from sea to sea, like a hunted stag. During the day,
-little of note occurred. Peralta avoided taking me
-further into his confidence, and I had tact enough to see
-that I ought to refrain from seeming to intrude upon his<span class="pagenum" id="Page_336">[Pg 336]</span>
-mystery. As I watched him, however, I often saw him
-bite his thin lips, and wrinkle his forehead, and clench
-his hand, as if distressing thoughts haunted him; and at
-last he broke out, addressing nobody in particular, but
-speaking moodily to himself—</p>
-
-<p>‘Those poor fellows!’ he cried, ‘those poor fellows
-Juan and Blanco—I would give every pearl the venture
-hath brought that they were safe and sound in this
-piragua. The Spaniards will hang them; nay, indeed, it
-may have been already done, and their bodies are swinging
-in this same sea-breeze!’</p>
-
-<p>Here Jenipa interposed very respectfully, and said that
-no effort we could have possibly made would have sufficed
-to rescue the Indians, and that we had nothing to
-reproach ourselves with on that score.</p>
-
-<p>‘No, no,’ said Peralta. ‘We could not have got them
-out of trouble; but we have been the cause that they fell
-into it.’</p>
-
-<p>He pondered for a minute. Then putting his hand
-into his bosom, he drew it forth, the hollow of the palm
-filled with small pearls, all glistening in the sun, like
-beads of frozen milk. Then he poured the precious
-morsels from one hand to the other, the pearls pattering
-and rattling like chips of shivered glass and pebbles, and
-began again to speak, like a man who talks in his sleep.</p>
-
-<p>‘Ay,’ he cried, ‘and you will sparkle in the coronets of
-nobles, or mayhap you will rise and fall on the white
-bosom of some peerless beauty across the western sea.
-Little will she think how her braveries have been won.
-Little will she think that the gems of her adornment are
-but as coagulated drops of human blood. Red, red, you
-ought to be, and not of that lying virgin whiteness—red,
-red, you ought to be, as the guilt of him who hath
-purveyed you, and the blood of the hapless men who, ere
-now, are doubtless but as lumps of brown carrion—only
-good to feed the vultures and the crows!’</p>
-
-<p>At this, I observed Jenipa and Disco exchange curious
-glances with each other; but Peralta, after musing for a
-short space further, put the pearls back into their hiding-place,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_337">[Pg 337]</span>
-and resumed, to a certain degree, his usual
-manner.</p>
-
-<p>‘I doubt not,’ he said to me, presently, ‘but that your
-acuteness hath taught you much of what last night you
-burned to know. The two poor savages, of whom I
-spoke, were indeed my agents among their brethren;
-and, thanks to their ingenuity and courage, many a rare
-pearl hath come to my wallet, instead of the poke of their
-Spanish task-masters. But all is over now. While I
-remained on shore, I risked the danger borne by my
-confederates. Had it been within the power of man to
-have saved them, I would have perilled limbs and life to
-bring them off, but it fell out otherwise. What is writ,
-is writ. Adieu, poor Juan and Blanco, and may you find
-the next world a better one than this.’</p>
-
-<p>Having pronounced this curious sort of funeral oration,
-Peralta straightway resumed his former demeanour, and
-I never heard him allude to the subject again. Meantime,
-we bounded merrily across the ocean, masts bending,
-canvas swelling, and sheet and haulyard cracking and
-straining; the blue heaven, with not a cloud to fleck it,
-all a blaze of azure light and glory above, and the crystal
-sea foaming, and tumbling, and gambolling beneath the
-swift piragua, as, with dripping prow and polished sides,
-she tore away upon her headlong course. My spirits,
-long drooping under captivity, now came flushing back,
-sending the young hot blood tingling through my veins.
-I leaped and danced about the piragua for very cheery-heartedness—Peralta
-smiling slily at my antics—and
-sometimes lifting up my voice, I sang an echoing chorus
-to the music of wind and wave! ‘A day or two,’
-I thought, ‘and I shall see, sleeping in the smooth water
-landward of the Palisades, my gallant schooner, which I
-love, and hear ringing from beneath her snow-white awning
-the cheery voices of my old comrades, of Stout Jem, the
-true-hearted, and Nicky Hamstring, the merry-minded!’</p>
-
-<p>Alas! not so fast, Leonard Lindsay—not so fast!
-There are perils and sufferings for you, by sea and land,
-ere you step upon English ground again!</p>
-
-<hr class="r10">
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_338">[Pg 338]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XXV">CHAPTER XXV.<br><br>
-<span class="fs80">THE PIRAGUA IS PICKED UP BY A GREAT PRIVATEER, AND I FIND<br>
-MYSELF AMONG NEW SHIPMATES.</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p>We were within a day’s sail of Jamaica. At the setting
-of the sun we had seen, even from our low vessel, the
-distant outline of the Blue Mountains. Peralta had the
-middle watch. I roused up about an hour and a half
-before sunrise, and found the piragua heaving upon
-smooth, oily swells, all unruffled even by a puff of wind.
-There was a great dank mist around us, packing upon the
-water as thick as smoke from a man-of-war’s broadside,
-and the very air seemed loaded with chill damp. I
-walked up and down the small fore deck of the piragua,
-trying, in my thin garments, to keep myself warm, and
-whistling for a breeze to blow away to leeward the filthy
-fog, which seemed, as it were, to enclose us round, and to
-cling and settle in its densest volume about the piragua.
-Standing at the bows, I could not see the stern, and as
-for the heads of the sails they were lost in the thick
-opaque air. It was curious to gaze out upon the water
-as the black looking undulations of the sea rolled under
-us, the mist seeming to rise and fall with them, and
-sometimes boiling and eddying from the motion of the
-waves, although not a breath of wind strayed over the
-ocean. I might have been upon duty about half an hour,
-when I almost leaped from the deck with amazement to
-hear suddenly, coming from whence I knew not, but
-ringing shrilly through the thick air, a loud cry or scream,
-like that uttered by a man in mortal anguish.</p>
-
-<p>‘Disco,’ I shouted, ‘did you hear that? What was
-that cry?’</p>
-
-<p>But the Indian, instead of answering me, stood dumb
-and trembling, as though struck with terror. Instantly
-the cry was repeated, and even louder and more vehemently
-than before.</p>
-
-<p>‘It is a spirit,’ said the Indian. ‘It is some bad spirit
-of the fog. It will come to us and kill us.’</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_339">[Pg 339]</span></p>
-
-<p>But I heeded not the superstition of the ignorant
-creature, and made but one bound to where Peralta lay
-sound asleep, clutching and shaking him to arouse him,
-and telling him in the same breath that there was either
-a ship or a boat close aboard of us in the fog. The
-pearl merchant and Jenipa were upon their legs in a
-moment, and for the space of about ten minutes we
-listened with all our ears, but heard no sound, other than
-the flapping of our sails and the creaking of the yards, as
-they rubbed and swayed against the masts. It was odd
-that, although both Disco and myself heard the cry so
-distinctly repeated, we neither of us could tell the
-direction from which it appeared to come. Perhaps the
-fog affected sounds passing through it. At all events,
-although we got out the oars, we knew not in which way
-to row, so as to put as much sea as possible between a
-ship which might very likely be an enemy, and which
-would certainly be more than a match for the light
-piragua and her crew of four. All this while the dawn
-was gradually brightening through the mist; the fog,
-which before was of a pitchy darkness, becoming gradually
-of a pale grey hue, and then lifting and opening here and
-there, so as to show lanes, as it were, and patches of clear
-air, which, in the next moment, would be again filled up
-by rolling masses of the vapour. However, the mist was
-evidently thinning as the sun approached to the horizon,
-and we watched warily to catch the first glimpse of our
-unknown neighbour. Presently, the fog began to change
-its cold white hue for a tinge or blush of warm and
-golden light, which appeared, as it were, to penetrate and
-pervade the vapour, and by which we knew that the sun
-had risen; while, at the same time, our glimpses into the
-ever-shifting lanes and clear spaces continually being
-formed by the motion of the seething wreaths and masses
-of vapour, becoming every moment longer and clearer—Peralta,
-who was standing upon the starboard gunwale of
-the piragua, suddenly exclaimed, in a low, earnest tone:</p>
-
-<p>‘There! look there!’</p>
-
-<p>We all turned round at once, and saw, not thirty<span class="pagenum" id="Page_340">[Pg 340]</span>
-fathoms from us, the dusky broadside and towering
-rigging of a ship. She was gracefully rocking upon the
-long seas, the mist all curling round her, and floating, as
-it appeared, in blurring patches and masses among her
-extended sails, so that the masts and all the fabric of
-spars and canvas which they bore were half lost in the
-bewildering vapour. We had no time, however, to make
-any very minute examination of the stranger. She saw
-us as soon as we saw her, and half a dozen men, clustering
-into the main rigging, shouted out, in French and
-English, that we should pull the piragua alongside. I
-looked at Peralta. He slightly shrugged his shoulders.
-‘If there were but a bladder full of wind,’ he said.</p>
-
-<p>‘Ho! the piragua ahoy!’ was now again hailed from
-the strange ship—‘come alongside, d’ye hear, or it will
-be the worse for you.’</p>
-
-<p>This threat had hardly been uttered, when, as if to back
-it, a cannon was fired from the maindeck, and we
-heard the ball, with a loud whistling hiss, pass above our
-masts. But the discharge of that gun had an effect
-which seemed almost miraculous upon the fog, clearing
-away, and, as it were, condensing and annihilating, by
-the shock of the explosion the vapour all around—so that
-we saw, very plainly, a goodly ship of three masts,
-carrying at least twelve cannons upon a side, with topsails
-and top-gallant-sails spread, but the yards braced
-clumsily, the canvas ill set, and much of the rigging in a
-loose and disorderly condition—the jib indeed hanging in
-great festoons down from the bowsprit—so that when the
-ship plunged by the head, the canvas dipped into the
-sea, from which it would presently arise, the water
-pouring from the belly of the sail as from a tub. On
-board this disorderly-looking craft there seemed to be a
-great swarm of men, who suddenly clustered upon the
-bulwarks and in the rigging to gaze at us, and one of
-whom, a varlet with long unkempt hair and torn and
-dirty linen doublet, suddenly screamed out—</p>
-
-<p>‘Why, comrades, never believe your eyes—if it be not
-Old Rumbold, of Port Royal in Jamaica, and Heaven<span class="pagenum" id="Page_341">[Pg 341]</span>
-knows how many places besides. What cheer, Old
-Rumbold?—Hast been a privateering in a bark canoe—or
-chaffering with and cheating the honest Indians of the
-Main?’</p>
-
-<p>Peralta seemed in no way put out by this recognition,
-for he immediately took off his hat very gallantly, and
-called out that he was heartily glad to meet with so many
-friends and gallant gentlemen adventurers on the high
-seas. Upon which the men on board the ship cheered
-lustily, and shouted to Peralta or Rumbold that he was
-an honest fellow, and that he must come aboard, with all
-his people, and that we should have a jovial cruise
-together. I watched the pearl-merchant, and saw that he
-was in reality much concerned at this unexpected stoppage
-of our voyage.</p>
-
-<p>‘Had it not been for that cursed fog,’ he whispered,
-‘this would not have happened. But these fellows are
-savages if their temper be crossed. We must e’en row
-with the tide and humour them.’</p>
-
-<p>Accordingly the piragua was speedily floating alongside
-the great ship, and, following Rumbold, as I may now
-call him, I clambered up the high sides. But what a
-sight did the deck present to me—a sailor hitherto
-accustomed to orderly vessels. Strewn everywhere about
-were great heaps of luggage and ship stores—trunks and
-mails mingled with coils of rope, and masses of sails—buckets,
-boat anchors, flags, handspikes, and what not—while,
-tumbled hither and thither in this chaos, sprawled
-more than a score of drunken seamen, some of them fast
-asleep and snoring, with empty bottles and glasses still
-grasped in their hands—others, still sitting up, babbling
-and singing, in maudlin fashion, over their liquor—or
-disputing fiercely with thickened speech and bloodshot
-eyes. The relics of a feast lay scattered over the decks,
-slippery with the wine and liquors spilt upon them.
-There were broken glasses and empty flasks, the smashed
-fragments of tobacco-pipes, divers dice-boxes, and packs
-of greasy cards. But the principal object on which my
-attention dwelt was the form of a stalwart, big-limbed<span class="pagenum" id="Page_342">[Pg 342]</span>
-sailor, who lay with his head resting on the knee of a
-man who was tending a hurt upon his temples. Looking
-more closely, I saw that the wounded man had received a
-desperate slash with a knife, which had laid open the side
-of his forehead and part of the cheek, narrowly missing
-the eye. From this gash the blood was pouring fast,
-while the surgeon, for such he was, who tended the
-wounded man, cleaned the ghastly cut, from time to time,
-with sponges dipped in hot water, while he prepared his
-instruments to sew it up. The patient was insensible,
-breathing hard and loud, and having his glazed eyes open,
-and gleaming with a wild, vacant stare. As I gazed, I
-immediately comprehended that it was the cry uttered by
-this man, as he was wounded, which had alarmed us in
-the piragua, and looking towards the bows, I saw a
-fellow, with his doublet-sleeve all bloody, being marched
-off in custody by a group of his comrades—all high in
-oath at the cowardly hound of a Portuguese, (as they called
-him,) who had used his knife instead of his fists in a
-quarrel among friends.</p>
-
-<p>Meantime, Rumbold seemed to be heartily welcomed
-by the more sober part of the crew, with the captain, as
-I judged him, at their head. This captain was a long
-gaunt man, with a slouching gait, and lank black hair
-falling straight down upon his shoulders. He had such
-a squint that it was, as I afterwards knew, a common
-saying in the ship about Le Chiffon Rouge—for such he,
-being a Frenchman, was called—that no one could tell at
-any moment whether he was looking forward or aft, up
-to the vane on the mast-head, or down into the hold.
-This ill-favoured personage—for besides his squinting eye
-he had an ugly hare lip, showing tusks which would not
-have been out of place in the jaw of a boar,—this ill-favoured
-personage, I say, protested loudly that his good
-friend Rumbold must positively sail out the cruize with
-them—that he would not be denied—and that the hills of
-Jamaica being in sight, for the mist had rapidly cleared
-away with the rising of the sun, the two Indians could
-very well carry home the piragua, while hammocks would<span class="pagenum" id="Page_343">[Pg 343]</span>
-be slung aboard for the worthy pearl merchant and his
-friend—meaning me. The captain was well seconded in
-these propositions by the chief mate, who was an Englishman,
-a coarse, fat personage, with bristling red hair, a
-ferocious expression, and a loud harsh voice. He was
-called Jerry, and I soon found that he was the real commander
-of the ship; Le Chiffon Rouge yielding to his
-judgment in all cases of emergency, and the pair keeping
-very close together. Now, for my own part, I was much
-puzzled to know the reason of this welcome, which was
-so much warmer than we wished for. If the ship was a
-friendly one, why did not she go her way and leave us to
-go ours, instead of detaining us prisoners; for that was
-what the affair actually came to, on board. I saw that
-Rumbold’s countenance was clouded, and that, although
-he put a good face on the matter, he would have freely
-given a round sum for a start of a league or so in the piragua.
-But wishing was useless. The Indians, who continued
-in the canoe, were, to their great astonishment,
-ordered to run for Port Royal, and to take word that
-Mr. Rumbold had joined the good ship, ‘Saucy Susan,’
-for a short run down by the Mosquito coast, and that
-she might be expected in Jamaica in a few weeks. By
-this time the morning trade-wind was beginning to blow,
-and the piragua speedily crept away, wafted by its first
-faint fannings. Then Jerry suddenly began to bestir
-himself—</p>
-
-<p>‘Here,’ he shouted, ‘here men, clear away the decks,
-fore and aft. You, boatswain, get the yards braced, and
-put all things aloft ship-shape and Bristol fashion.
-What! d——n my eyes, is the ship to be always in this
-cursed mess? Here, you two boatswain’s mates, come
-and kick these drunken hogs. Overboard with barrel
-and bucket. Draw water, will you, and souse these fellows
-who are littering the deck, soundly. Curse and
-confound me, but a parcel of wild Indians would have
-more decency aboard ship! Doctor, how is that fellow’s
-skull? We shall serve out the thief who cut him, presently.
-Come, men, look alive there, or by all the devils<span class="pagenum" id="Page_344">[Pg 344]</span>
-dancing in hell, I’ll make you feel the flat of my cutlass!’</p>
-
-<p>At this energetic speech there was a general bustle on
-deck. About half of the drunken fellows staggered to
-their feet, and began to tumble about, half asleep, lurching
-and pitching against each other, owing to the roll of
-the ship.</p>
-
-<p>‘Quick, will you there!’ Jerry roared; ‘get the
-buckets full, and baptise these brandy kegs;’ pointing to
-the drunkards, who were still sleeping. In a minute a
-dozen pails were over the ship’s sides, and immediately,
-amid shouts of jeering and laughter, copious floods of the
-cooling brine were dashed over the heads and bodies of
-the snorers, who started up all bewildered, shouting and
-spluttering, half-choked, and swearing at such scurvy
-treatment. However, in a few minutes a wonderful
-transformation was effected—the decks were cleared—those
-of the crew who had not sufficiently slept off their
-debauch to be able to resume their duty, were tumbled
-down the hatches to their hammocks—the yards were
-braced properly for the course which we were lying—a
-steady-looking old seaman was at the wheel, and the
-‘Saucy Susan’ began to move slowly upon her course,
-rising heavily to the seas, and butting at them with her
-great broad bows as they came rolling past.</p>
-
-<p>Meantime, I kept alongside of Rumbold—to whom the
-captain was explaining, with great gravity, that having
-last night taken a small Spanish sloop, aboard which
-there was very excellent wine, the greater part of the
-crew had been drunk all night, a thing, he admitted, not
-very seamanlike: ‘But what then—what could he do?
-<em>Messieurs les aventuriers</em> would have their way.’ Presently,
-however, stepping forward to confer with Jerry, who was
-certainly bringing the ship into hand again, in the style of
-a man who knows his business, Rumbold whispered to me:</p>
-
-<p>‘I know something of this ship. She is manned by
-the worst set of rogues who sail from Jamaica. There
-may be some honest men aboard, but both the Frenchman
-and Jerry, his mate, are as great rascals as ever rode colt<span class="pagenum" id="Page_345">[Pg 345]</span>
-foaled of an acorn, and I doubt it not but that a crew of
-their choosing will be found to match bravely.’</p>
-
-<p>I inquired what he thought were the reasons which induced
-them to detain us on board?</p>
-
-<p>‘Why, as to that,’ says he, ‘I doubt not but that some
-of the rogues have a shrewd guess where I come from,
-and that I have pearls of price about me. I hardly think
-they would rob me openly and divide the booty in the
-face of day, but there are dozens of these cursed jail
-birds who would think no more of drawing a knife across
-a man’s weasand while he slept, if that would help them
-to filch a brass-farthing’s worth, than I would of smoking
-a whiff of tobacco.’</p>
-
-<p>Then Rumbold asked whether I recognised the young
-fellow who first hailed him by name? and presently
-pointed him out, laughing and talking to Jerry. ‘I know
-the rascal well,’ said the pearl merchant. ‘He hath
-nimble wits and nimble fingers. I warrant ’twas he first
-tipped Jerry and the captain the wink in this matter. If
-it be so, depend upon it that the three intend to keep the
-thing snug to themselves, and share the plunder—that is,
-if they can get it.’</p>
-
-<p>Our converse was broken up by the captain and mate
-walking aft together. The vessel was by this time put
-into proper trim, and standing on her course, with sails
-very well set, and swelling gaily in the breeze. The
-mate looked to windward. ‘I think the weather will
-hold steady,’ he said. Immediately, the captain shouted
-out to the boatswain to call all hands, and, presently, in
-answer to that shrill, sharp whistle, which penetrates
-down to the very keel of a ship, the crew tumbled upon
-deck, most of them being by this time sober enough, and
-trooped aft to the break of the poop, upon which Le Chiffon
-Rouge and Jerry stood. The ship was then hove to,
-with her broad maintop-sail laid to the mast, and Le
-Chiffon Rouge taking off his three-cornered hat, as it was
-the custom of the captain of a privateer to do when he
-addressed the whole crew, began to speak in a smooth,
-plausible fashion, to this effect—</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_346">[Pg 346]</span></p>
-
-<p>‘Last night, gentlemen, as you well know, the “Saucy
-Susan” captured a Spanish sloop, out of which we took
-what we wanted, and then dismissed her. You cannot
-complain, any of you, that you had not as much of the
-good wine which we found aboard the sloop, as you could
-swill, with plenty of time and space to drink it in. But,
-gentlemen, here hath an ugly accident turned out in your
-revelry, and which it behoves me to inquire into. One of
-our honourable company hath drawn his knife, and
-wounded a comrade, in his cups, and that, by all the
-rules of privateersmen, must be punished. It is not
-that I much care about a kick on the shins, or a box on
-the ears, given or taken when the wine cup is full, and
-the dice-box rattling—but cold steel, comrades, we must
-keep for the Spaniards, and not get into the habit of polishing
-our knives against each other’s ribs.’</p>
-
-<p>The crew applauded this address, which seemed reasonable
-enough; but Rumbold whispered to me, that he
-would lay his life upon it that either Le Chiffon Rouge,
-or Jerry, had some cause of spite against the Portuguese;
-otherwise, said he, the whole ship’s company might hack
-the flesh off each other’s bones without interference.</p>
-
-<p>‘Now then,’ continued the scowling captain, ‘some of
-you fetch Vasco, of Lisbon, hither, and Doctor, do you
-bring up Shambling Ned.’ So, in a few minutes, the
-Portuguese, with his hands tied behind him, was hurried
-along the deck, and the wounded man came out of the
-cabin, leaning upon the surgeon, and looking very pale,
-his blood still clotted in jelly-looking masses among his
-long hair. Vasco, in spite of his great name, seemed to
-me to be as hang-dog looking a rascal as ever I saw, with
-a low flat forehead, and only one eye. He was a lithe,
-slightly made young fellow, with a thin, ragged beard and
-drooping moustache. When he was confronted with the
-captain and Jerry, the latter cast a look upon him so full
-of hate and spite, that I soon perceived that Rumbold
-was in the right in his conjecture. The Portuguese
-never appeared to notice the wounded man at all.</p>
-
-<p>‘Now, then,’ the captain began, ‘you, Shambling Ned,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_347">[Pg 347]</span>
-‘tell us how you came by that trench upon your forehead.’</p>
-
-<p>But Shambling Ned, who was, as I have said, a stout
-seaman, but with a hitch in his gait, from whence he
-obtained his nickname, gave but a very confused account
-of the transaction. What between the quantity of wine
-which he had drunk, and the quantity of blood which he
-had lost, his wits appeared to be still gone a wool-gathering,
-and all that he could say was, that he had been playing
-dice for small stakes with the Portuguese, when they
-had a quarrel about a cast, and that blows had passed;
-but who had struck first he really did not know; that
-in the middle of the scuffle, however, when they were
-staggering about among their comrades and tripping
-over the masses of goods and stores which lay upon the
-deck, he suddenly saw a knife in the hand of his adversary,
-and, almost at the same instant, he had received the
-violent cut upon his head, from which the hot blood came
-pouring down; that after that he knew nothing, until he
-was brought to himself by the smart of the surgeon’s
-instrument sewing up the wound.</p>
-
-<p>The evidence of several of the seamen was then taken,
-but they all gave different accounts; some maintaining
-that Vasco had begun the fray, and others that Shambling
-Ned had first seized up a knife himself, so that I
-saw very plainly that the whole affair was the effect of a
-drunken squabble, in which one was probably as much to
-blame as another. At last, however, the young man who
-had recognised Rumbold, stood forth, and I saw very
-plainly the glance of intelligence which passed between
-him and Jerry.</p>
-
-<p>‘Now for Tommy Nixon’s testimony,’said the captain;
-‘and I warrant that he will speak more to the purpose than
-these noddies there, who seem to make no more use of
-their eyes than if they were boiled gooseberries!’</p>
-
-<p>So Nixon began to speak in a low, whining sort of
-tone, professing great regret for the disturbance, and
-particularly that Vasco, whom he said he loved as though
-he had been his own brother, should have so shamefully<span class="pagenum" id="Page_348">[Pg 348]</span>
-outraged all the laws observed by gentlemen adventurers.
-Still the truth was the truth; and if he must tell what
-he knew, it was this, that Vasco having tried to cheat
-Shambling Ned out of the piece of eight which they were
-playing for, and having been reproached by the latter for
-his meanness, had straightway hit Ned in the face; and
-that when Ned had risen to his feet to defend himself,
-the Portuguese had immediately drawn his knife and
-struck the blow, swearing at the same time that he
-would like to do as much for every Englishman on board
-the ship.</p>
-
-<p>At this, the Portuguese, who had hitherto stood, with
-downcast looks, listening to all the evidence, burst out in
-violent wrath, sputtering vehemently forth his broken
-English, and almost screaming in his excitement—</p>
-
-<p>‘That a lie—a lie, a lie!’ he shouted. ‘A lie, Nixon—Jerry
-tell you say that—you liars both I—I no wish to
-stab my shipmates, but Jerry hate me, and you Jerry
-friend—and you lie!’</p>
-
-<p>There was a murmur among the men, for it was not
-difficult to see that Jerry and Nixon had great influence
-over them, and many a clenched hand was raised against
-the Portuguese, who, I believe, had certainly cut open
-Ned’s head, not, however, with premeditation, but in
-the scuffle and the heat of blood. Meantime, Nixon
-turned up his eyes to heaven, and shook his uplifted
-hands, as who should say, ‘Patience—patience, friends, I
-can afford to bear the calumny.’ Not so Jerry, however.
-His nature was different; and so, dashing down
-his hat upon the deck in his rage, with his moustaches
-bristling, and his flashing eyes fixed upon the culprit, he
-roared—</p>
-
-<p>‘Here be a pitiful hound of a Portuguese for you, who
-dare raise his murdering arm to stab a freeborn Englishman,
-and then asperse the witnesses of the cruel deed!
-If he remain unpunished for it, I leave this ship, and I
-would advise all them who don’t take the part of the
-white-livered scoundrel to do the same—that is, if they
-don’t want to feel his murdering knife tickling their ribs!’</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_349">[Pg 349]</span></p>
-
-<p>‘Jerry,’ cried out Vasco, all at once, ‘I know what
-you mean very well. You no care for either blow or
-stab, that you no get yourself. You stab Nickel, the
-Dutchman, in Tortugas; you shoot John Cox off St.
-Christopher’s. You a pretty fellow to talk!’</p>
-
-<p>But here Jerry interrupted him. ‘Now, then,’ he
-roared, ‘what are you about there, that you don’t clap
-a marline-spike in the fellow’s jaws? I suppose he intends
-to bully us out of the ship!’</p>
-
-<p>Instantly half-a-dozen stout fellows threw themselves
-upon Vasco, who still, however, contrived, before he was
-effectually gagged, to yell out in broken sentences—</p>
-
-<p>‘Jerry—I say, Jerry—you do this because I prevent
-you marry my countrywoman, who keep tavern at
-Tortugas, and tell her, you have one, two, three wife
-already!’</p>
-
-<p>But Jerry’s orders were speedily obeyed, and the
-Portuguese—with a stout rope passed through his mouth,
-keeping the jaws wide open, and made fast to the back of
-his head—could only grin and flash his one eye upon his
-successful persecutor. Jerry was now in his glory. His
-ugly face was all lighted up with the excitement of gratified
-spite; and roaring to the men, that now they would
-teach a cowardly Portuguese to lift his hand upon his
-betters he proposed that, as a punishment for what he
-had done, Vasco should be made to run the gauntlet,
-from the mizen-mast forward to the heel of the bowsprit
-and back again. This proposal was received with acclamations
-by the rest of the crew, most of whom were
-brutal fellows enough, and quite under the thumb of
-Jerry, who, as I have said, was really captain, though he
-pretended to be only second in command; and so, presently,
-Le Chiffon Rouge, after whispering to his mate,
-ordered an old pair of topgallant-sail haulyards to be cut
-up into lengths of about three feet each. This was soon
-done, and then each man was armed with a piece of the
-strong stiff rope, with which, of course, one could strike
-as with a cudgel. The culprit eyed all these preparations
-in sulky silence, and made no resistance, even when Jerry<span class="pagenum" id="Page_350">[Pg 350]</span>
-himself, with a devil-like leer of delight in his eyes, tore
-off his doublet and shirt, leaving his swarthy back bare
-for the blows which awaited it.</p>
-
-<p>‘That man,’ whispered Rumbold to me, indicating
-Jerry, ‘is as great a fool as he is a brute. These Portuguese
-are not the fellows to forget a scar marked upon
-their backs. Sooner or later, unless he have very marvellous
-good luck, the knife which cut open Shambling Ned’s
-head will make itself acquainted with Mr. Jerry’s inward
-anatomy also.’ In this remark I very cordially agreed;
-but Jerry seemed to be under very little uneasiness on
-the score, for he went joking about, showing the men
-how to grasp the ropes, so as to lay on the most vigorous
-cuts. The punishment of running the gauntlet is one
-which its executors can make as light or as heavy as
-they choose; and in the present instance the culprit did
-not seem, judging from most of the faces around him, to
-have much to hope for; while those of the crew who had,
-perhaps, given and received over many knife-slashes themselves,
-to have any very great horror of the crime, stood
-too much in awe of Jerry to favour the culprit.</p>
-
-<p>At length, all being in readiness, and the crew, to the
-number of fifty-five, ranged in a double line, one on the
-larboard and the other on the starboard side of the deck,
-the hands of the Portuguese were tied behind him, and
-his ankles hampered so as to prevent his taking but little
-steps. Then Jerry, whose duty it was, as mate, took
-the poor devil by the ear, and, giving it a wrench, the
-Portuguese shuffled on until he stood before the first man
-in the line.</p>
-
-<p>‘Now, Jack,’ said Jerry, ‘here’s the mark for you;
-let’s see what pith you have got in your muscles.’</p>
-
-<p>So the seaman addressed flourished his rope cudgel
-aloft, and then brought it down upon the naked back of
-the Portuguese, with a blow which echoed over the deck,
-and raised a broad white-coloured bar of flesh, which
-started up from the shoulder almost to the loin. The
-sufferer staggered under the weight of the stroke,
-and immediately all his back, except just where the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_351">[Pg 351]</span>
-scourge fell, turned to a burning red; but he uttered no
-sound.</p>
-
-<p>‘Very well struck, Jack,’ said the mate, and then
-dragged the prisoner forward to receive the second blow.
-Ten minutes passed over at least, before the Portuguese
-had got through one-half of his punishment, by arriving in
-the bows of the ship; for Jerry prolonged the torture by
-stopping to joke with each man before he struck, and
-advising him to lay it on well. The whole scene was a
-very brutal one, and I would gladly have left the deck if
-I could. There was no escape, however, and I saw the
-poor wretch flogged up one side of the ship and down the
-other, each blow given by the full strength of an unwearied
-arm. When the prisoner had completed his
-miserable walk, he was trembling all over; great drops
-of sweat were running down his face, and his back,
-although the skin was not actually cut, was a mass of
-ugly-coloured swellings.</p>
-
-<p>‘He will faint in a minute,’ said Rumbold, ‘and cheat
-Jerry of the finishing stroke’</p>
-
-<p>But, as if the mate had been aware of his danger, he
-hurriedly flourished his scourge round his head, so as to
-give it the full swing of his brawny arm, and then
-brought it down upon the sufferer with a buffet which
-might have broken the spine of a bull, and which drove
-the wretch who received it flat upon the deck, where he
-lay stark and motionless.</p>
-
-<p>‘Well,’ said Le Chiffon Rouge, who, being captain,
-had not personally interfered in the punishment, ‘it is to
-be hoped that Monsieur Vasco hath had a lesson upon the
-disadvantages of drawing knives upon comrades.’</p>
-
-<p>‘And upon the disadvantages of making enemies of
-more powerful men than himself,’ whispered Rumbold.
-‘I dare say the fellow is a rascal, but he was flogged, not
-for cutting open his shipmate’s head, but for preventing
-the mate from getting a fourth wife.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Here, men,’ roared Jerry, as he twitched up the head
-of the prostrate man by the hair, and then allowed it to
-fall with a thump upon the deck, ‘slush this carrion with<span class="pagenum" id="Page_352">[Pg 352]</span>
-a bucketfull of salt water, and then tumble him down the
-hatchway. I warrant he don’t lie on his back in his
-hammock for a month of Sundays.’</p>
-
-<p>These orders were speedily carried into effect, and the
-Portuguese having been taken below, the maintopsail
-was filled, and the ship again stood upon her course.</p>
-
-<p>In the course of the day, Jerry and Nixon came up to
-me together, and proposed, very civilly, that, as I was a
-sailor, I should join the ship for the cruise; in which
-case, they told me, that I should have my regular share
-of the prize-money as if I had been on board since they
-went to sea, about three months ago. Of course I had
-nothing for it but to agree to the proposal, although I
-loathed the whole set among whom I had been thus so
-strangely thrown. ‘Oh,’ thought I, ‘things were different
-on board the “Will-o’-the-Wisp,” with Stout Jem
-for a commander, and a hearty set of fellows under him,
-as honest as they were brave.’ But there was no help for
-it, and so my name was duly enrolled in the great book
-of the ‘Saucy Susan.’</p>
-
-<p>This being done, I of course took up my quarters with
-the crew, while Rumbold was accommodated in the great
-cabin. It was truly a virtuous company in which I
-found myself enlisted, almost every second man of them
-having left England after having made it too hot to hold
-him. One young fellow, with a ready laugh and a quick
-eye, told me that he had been thrice left for execution in
-Newgate, and was each time saved by the interest of
-friends. At last he was sent to the plantations, where
-he was purchased by a confederate, and set at liberty
-directly. Another man told me, that he had broken half
-the jails in England, and boasted that there never was
-smith made a lock which he could not pick with a rusty
-nail. A third fellow had been a foot-pad on Blackheath,
-and fled the country with the Hue and Cry at his heels.
-There were many more who had been thieves and rogues
-all their lives, having, indeed, been brought up to that
-business in the streets of London, in which they had
-been, as it were, born, and then allowed to run wild like<span class="pagenum" id="Page_353">[Pg 353]</span>
-young savages—their hands against every man, and every
-man’s hands against them. By one of these men I was
-told, that he never knew the name of either his father or
-mother. The first thing he could remember was, that he
-used to fight with dogs in Lincoln’s Inn Fields for garbage
-and bones. He slept upon bunks in the streets in
-summer, and among the ashes in the glass-houses in
-winter, until having amassed money by many fortunate
-robberies, for, quoth he, ‘my street education made me
-sharp,’ he got to live in White Friars, the Mint, and
-places of that kind, where he cared little for either
-warrants or thief-takers. ‘I promise you,’ quoth he,
-‘the Lord Chief Justice cannot take a man there unless
-he come backed by a company of musketeers.’ Another
-of our most virtuous crew had been a highwayman, and
-used to infest Gradshill, particularly after a ship had been
-paid off at Chatham, and the seamen came swarming up
-on the London road to expend their money in town
-debauchery. Having been apprehended sleeping in an
-inn on the borders of Epping Forest, where it seems he
-sometimes lay in wait for Cambridge scholars journeying
-past, a prosecutor was found to come forward against
-him at Newgate in very curious fashion. He told me
-the story himself.</p>
-
-<p>‘There were six of us,’ quoth he, ‘and they had suspicions
-against all, but no witnesses. The fact was, that
-they knew very well that we had walked Watling Street,
-and perhaps other roads also, but they could find no one
-to prove it. So this was the plan the lawyers hit on.
-They published a notice in the <cite>London Gazette</cite>, to say,
-that six persons, reputed highwaymen, would be publicly
-exhibited in Newgate, dressed in riding suits, and just as
-they appeared on the road, so that any one who had been
-recently robbed might be able to tell whether the thief
-was in the clutches of the law. So the day came, and we
-were made, every man of us, to don our riding gear, and
-then with boot and red doublet, pistols at our belts,
-and just a morsel of crape dangling from our hats, we were
-paraded up and down the long galleries, while a crowd of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_354">[Pg 354]</span>
-ladies and court gallants examined us with their glasses,
-and joked and laughed and coquetted, and told us to
-turn, first one way and then the other, and said, as each
-passed by, “No, no, he is not the fellow who robbed me;
-bring up the next, good master turnkey, and make him
-turn well round, so that we may see his face to our
-satisfaction.” It would have been very well, however, if
-all the remarks had been like these. But, one by one,
-my poor companions were marked out and carried away.
-“Here be the very man who eased me of my purse on
-Gadshill,” quoth a fat grazier of Kent, and stout Tom
-Clinch was straightway taken to the hold.’ “O’ my life,
-the rascal who stopped her ladyship’s carriage on Hounslow,
-and made us all hand over watches and cash,” says
-a mincing carpet knight, and the fate of brave Moonlight
-Dick was settled. Even thus our misdeeds came home
-to us; so that in the space of an hour and a half I stood
-alone, and then, the crowd of spectators beginning to
-disperse, I had good hope that my lucky stars would prevail,
-and that I would be allowed to go forth for lack
-of evidence. But alas! in the nick of time, just as the
-captain of Newgate was thinking of turning me adrift
-with a kick and an oath, up there trips a dainty gentlewoman,
-whose face I knew in an instant, for I had said
-some few flattering words in praise of the brilliancy of
-her eyes, and what not, to which she listened nothing
-loath, while I conveyed to my own pouch a golden
-locket she wore, filled with hair, which I warrant you
-grew never on the bald head of her spouse, an old lawyer
-of Lincoln’s Inn. So she stared at me very hard, while
-I twisted my features first one way and then the other,
-now cocking my eye, now leering it, so that I saw she
-was mightily puzzled. But just then old Diggory, the
-thief-taker, fetched me a wipe over the chops; “Take
-that, you mumper,” says he, “and keep your ugly face
-quiet till the gentlewoman decide.” But it was no such
-easy matter for her to pronounce; and at length quo’ my
-madam, as cool as an’ she had been in a raree-show, and
-wished to hear the lion roar, “Make him speak, good<span class="pagenum" id="Page_355">[Pg 355]</span>
-master keeper, make him speak, and I shall know the
-voice.” So says old Diggory, “Come, Helter-Skelter
-Joe, you hear what the lady says, tip us a few tongue
-flourishes.” So I commenced grumbling and snorting
-through my nose, but it wouldn’t do. “Stow that,” says
-Diggory, “or we shall have the hangman in with his cat-o’-nine
-tails.” Then I set to gabbling in a high treble,
-like a dame of Billingsgate whose comrades had stolen
-her fish,—but it was all in vain, they made me talk in
-my own voice at last, and quoth the bona roba as soon as
-she heard the patter, “Oh, good master jailer, it is the
-villain, indeed.” So I was tried—condemned—left for
-execution, and I can tell you it took both money and
-friends to prevent my going up Holborn Hill in a cart.’</p>
-
-<p>There were others of the crew, however, more reputable
-characters, so far as regarded actual roguery, but
-they were one and all a devil-may-care set, without
-thought or morals, and only anxious for plunder and
-debauchery. Several of them had been kidnapped, as
-they told me, from Bristol, Norwich, Newcastle, London,
-and other places. These were all of them youths under
-twenty, and two or three of them had been, they said,
-sold by their parents. They had all of them, however,
-managed, after serving for different periods, to make their
-escape from Virginia, and to find their way into the West
-Indian seas. They gave doleful accounts of their treatment
-in the plantations—how they had been flogged and
-starved, and of the great numbers who had died from
-fever and sun strokes. Those who had been kidnapped
-frequently fared worse than the convicted felons, because
-the former, being generally of tender years, were less
-able to protect themselves than the old thieves and
-vagabonds who were transported thither from the jails of
-England. The reader will easily understand that a great
-number of the crew of the ‘Saucy Susan’ were but very
-poor sailors, and clumsy fellows in blowing weather aloft.
-Indeed, it was sometimes rare sport to see the boatswain
-and his mates, armed with big rattans, thrashing the
-skulkers out of their hammocks, and chasing them up to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_356">[Pg 356]</span>
-their duty from all the secret holes and hiding-places in
-the ship; while Jerry would be storming and raving on
-the poop, and swearing that he would shoot the last man
-who got out on the yard in reefing topsails. Among these
-lubberly rogues, however, there were a handful of prime
-sailors, chiefly old men, who had swung in hammocks
-nigh half a century, and had been tossed on every sea all
-round the world. The great fault they had was, that not
-a single man of the whole lot would keep sober if he had
-an opportunity of getting drunk. For all that, however,
-Jerry was forced to depend upon these sailors, his
-‘Mother Carey’s chickens,’ as he called them, for the
-safe navigation of the ship; knowing very well that, if
-the rest of the crew were but fresh water seamen, they
-were as good, with cutlasses and boarding-pikes in their
-hands, as the most daring veterans of the sea. With
-these ancient mariners I chiefly consorted, we forming a
-company who kept somewhat aloof from the rake-helly
-set we lived among, and during the many calm midwatches
-I kept on board the ‘Saucy Susan,’ I picked
-up many legends and tales of the sea from these old
-men, who had passed long lives upon the face of the
-waters. I have already given to the reader one story,
-as a sample of the kind of legends which we Buccaneers
-loved to listen to, and I shall here add another of
-the same sort, relating to a notion which was very common
-amongst seamen of the time of which I speak,
-but which has now, I believe, except with the most
-ignorant of the class, wholly died away. I mean, the
-idea that particular capes or headlands running out into
-the sea are haunted by evil demons, who hate ships to pass
-by, and who, therefore, raise tempests to beat them back,
-and prevent them from doubling the point, or spot of
-land in question. This belief, no doubt, rose from the
-general stormy nature of the seas off capes and outstretching
-tongues of land. The two great capes of the
-world—the Cape of Good Hope and Cape Horn, many
-sailors believed to be haunted by most powerful demons,
-and regarded the awful gales which blew, and the fearful<span class="pagenum" id="Page_357">[Pg 357]</span>
-seas which run thereabouts, as nothing but the work of
-these Cape devils, if I may call them so, not remembering
-that the phenomena in question are simply the effect
-of geographical position and the unchanging laws of the
-elements. However, I proceed to my story, merely premising
-that the seaman who told it, and who was an
-old mariner with a white beard, did devoutly believe in
-all the extravagancies which I have just mentioned, as
-well as in the fantastic tale which he told. I give it in
-rather better language than the narrator made use of;
-his speech, indeed, being much seasoned with forecastle
-expressions, not of the most delicate nature. But it is
-worthy of a new chapter.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="r10">
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XXVI">CHAPTER XXVI.<br><br>
-<span class="fs80">THE LEGEND OF THE DEMON WHO HAUNTS POINT MORANT IN<br>
-JAMAICA.</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p>Old Josiah Ward, for such was the name of my storyteller,
-recounted the legend to about a dozen of us, as we
-sat in the lee of the long-boat on the deck, the breeze
-blowing gently, and the ‘Saucy Susan’ running slowly
-before it. Thus he spoke—</p>
-
-<p>‘Just one score of years after the great Christopher
-Columbus discovered the New World, there sailed westward,
-across the Atlantic, a ship, or rather galley, of
-strange make and fashion. She was very long, shipmates,
-and floated low and deep in the water, but her prow, all
-carved and fantastically wrought, rose up above her deck
-curved like the neck of a swan, and ending in a great
-eagle’s beak. This head and beak were of iron. At the
-top of both her masts, for there were two, this galley
-carried broad, swallow-tailed pendants, quite black, except
-that there were in the centre of each an eagle’s head
-and beak of red colour, just like the head and beak at the
-prow. The galley sailed marvellously fast, and the wind
-that bore her was ever fair. Yes, shipmates, weeks and
-weeks rolled on, and not a mariner on board her had need
-to start sheet, or tack,—and yet tempests swept across<span class="pagenum" id="Page_358">[Pg 358]</span>
-her path, and the crew of the galley saw Spanish caravals
-founder in the great waves, not a bow-shot from their
-ship, while they were speeding over water ruffled only by
-a gentle breeze. And the reason was, shipmates, that
-an enchanted wind filled the galley’s sails, and before its
-breath the natural storms of the air could not prevail.
-There was always, as it were, a spot of fair wind upon the
-ocean, running rapidly westward, and in the centre of
-that spot, the galley swept across the waves, going with
-sails and oars.</p>
-
-<p>‘The sailors who manned this strange bark were men
-of very fair complexion, of light blue eyes and long flaxen
-hair, and the language they spoke was the tongue of that
-far northern land—whence, in the old days, came forth,
-each in his war-galley, the fierce sea-kings—the Buccaneers
-of the North—shipmates, to plunder and to spoil.
-These men were heathens and unbelievers—they worshipped
-gods, called Odin and Thor, and each had a
-magic sword, the steel of which was wrought by little
-demons who live under ground, and in hollow places,
-which they scoop in great rocks and stones, and where
-they forge such blades that no weapon, were it even
-welded by the cunning makers of Damascus, could prevail
-against them. But the strangest thing of all, comrades,
-was that the captain of this ship was a woman—a
-woman of great stature, and fierce and lofty aspect.
-Her name was Tronda, and she was a sorceress; she
-could make the winds blow as she listed, and she had a
-crystal into which those who looked could see the future.
-This Tronda, mates, was a witch of great power, and she
-came from one of the northern islands, near that huge
-whirlpool called Lofoden, which can suck great navies
-down into the abysses of the sea. She wore a sea-green
-coloured tunic, with a necklace of beads made of a pebble
-called adder-stone, which hath strange virtues, and her
-head-gear was formed of the fur of the wild cat. Likewise
-she wore a very broad girdle, on which were embroidered
-strange words and letters in gold, and to it
-was attached a pouch, in which she kept the charms and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_359">[Pg 359]</span>
-spells with which she conjured. But her great power
-was over the elements, shipmates, for Tronda was a witch
-of Lapland—that dreary coast of snow which mariners
-skirt, sailing into the White Sea—and her name was
-known as a potent trafficker in such powers as ordinary
-mortals possess not, and many shipmen came to her and
-spoke her fair, and gave her money, and she sold them
-fair winds to waft them on their course. But I have
-heard, shipmates, that such was the nature of these unnatural
-breezes, that they wrecked every seventh ship
-which sailed before them. Six would go prosperously to
-their port, but the wind which the seventh had purchased,
-would gradually swell and wax great and mighty,
-until it became a hurricane, which tore sail and mast
-before it, and beat the ill-fated ship down into the sea.</p>
-
-<p>‘It was by certain rhymes, comrades, that Tronda and
-the other Lapland witches ruled the air, and made the
-storm-clouds fly as they wished. I have heard that she
-would stand high on a rock, or upon the poop of a ship,
-when the sea was calm below, and the summer air clear
-above. Then would she toss her arms above her head,
-and kneeling down, with her fair hair streaming over her
-shoulders, sing the magic song, which brought forth
-clouds upon the heavens, and unchained the wind, to
-rush over the howling sea. No one understood this song,
-but its name was <em>Vard lokur</em>—and it was in an ancient
-northern tongue called Lap, many words of which have
-power over the swart demons, and dwarfs, and elvish
-workers in metals, who live under the mountains of Finland
-and Jutland.</p>
-
-<p>‘Now, Tronda was a miser, and loved gold, and when
-mariners came to her and told her legends about a new
-world lying to the west, far across the ocean, and where
-the yellow metal and stones still more precious glistened
-and shone, on every mountain and on every beach, she
-said—“I, too, will depart and see that golden land, where
-there is neither frost nor cold, but diamonds bright as
-icicles, and pearls as white as snow.” Then she embarked
-in her galley, and raised a magic wind, which bore her<span class="pagenum" id="Page_360">[Pg 360]</span>
-across the Atlantic, and at sunrise one bright morning,
-she saw before her the land of the New World. But the
-galley had not coasted far, when two caravals came forth
-and gave her chase. The Spaniards knew little with
-whom they had to deal; Tronda stood on the poop of her
-ship, and stretched her arms forth, singing her magic
-rhymes in Lap, and straightway a squall came rushing
-down from the land, and before the Spaniards could lower
-their sails, it broke upon the caravals, and ships and crews
-sunk together in the sea.</p>
-
-<p>‘So, the fame of Tronda, the Lapland witch, that could
-sell winds, was noised abroad all over the Indies. She
-never went ashore—but in her galley, with the eagle’s
-beak, she cruised among the islands and along the main.
-The Spanish captains often went aboard the galley, and
-humbled themselves before the witch, and bought winds
-to carry them from isle to isle, and port to port, each
-wind being purchased with a lump of gold. When the
-Inquisition, which was established in Cuba, heard of this
-strange trafficking, they sent caravals of war to capture
-the sorceress, but her powers baffled all their skill. Sometimes,
-she stilled the air, so that all the ships lay motionless
-together. Then, just as the Spaniards would get
-out their boats to row to the Norse galley, a gentle
-breeze would fan her sails, and she would glide deftly
-away, while Tronda, who took a pleasure in tormenting
-her pursuers, would stand upon the poop, worshipping
-her strange gods, and singing her unlawful incantations.
-At other times, she would raise mists, in the midst of
-which the Spaniards would grope for days, firing guns,
-and ringing bells—so that, at last, the ships of war gave
-up the chase, and returned to the Havannah. But no
-one who sought Tronda to buy a wind, had ever any difficulty
-in boarding her galley. She received all such with
-fair words and courteous bearing, and gave them, in
-return for their gold, each a large stoup, or jar, the mouth
-of it sealed with wax, bearing strange figures and signs.
-This jar each captain took with him, and directly the
-anchor was lifted, Tronda would instruct him to break<span class="pagenum" id="Page_361">[Pg 361]</span>
-the seal, when immediately the fair breeze would fill the
-sails, and the ship would move gaily on her way. So, by
-this traffic, Tronda amassed vast riches, and every week
-the galley sunk lower and deeper in the water, with its
-increasing freight of precious stones and gold. But it
-was not alone fair and gentle breezes which the Lapland
-witch trafficked in. She sold adverse winds and awful
-storms to the enemies of luckless mariners. She sold
-calms, too, which haunted a hapless ship, chaining her,
-as it were, to the unruffled sea, until, drop by drop, the
-fresh water was drunk out, and the sailors died on the
-deck, or cast themselves overboard in their raving delirium
-of thirst. And so many a customer came to Tronda
-to buy prosperous winds for friends, and wrecking tempests
-for enemies. The smug merchant purchased a fair
-wind for himself, and a baffling breeze for his rival in the
-trade. The love-lorn maiden bought a prosperous gale
-for her sweetheart’s ship, and the jealous dame paid gold
-for a tempest to wreck the bark of a faithless lover.</p>
-
-<p>‘Now, comrades, years moved slowly on, and the
-Norse galley was so deep in the water with gold and
-precious stones, that, had it not been for enchantment,
-she would have sunk outright. Then the blue-eyed and
-long-haired mariners entreated Tronda that she would
-allow them to look again upon the mountains and the
-Fiords of Norway, and that she would raise a westerly
-breeze to carry them home across the ocean. But the
-witch scoffed at their requests, giving them foul words,
-and saying that she must have more gold. The chief of
-the crew was a young man called Torquil, and he it was
-who sighed most for home, because he had left a maiden
-there whom he loved, and from whom he had been long
-parted. Therefore, after Tronda had retired to the great
-cabin, where she lived alone, Torquil entered it unbidden.
-It was quite dark, for the cabin was beneath the water,
-and no light came down to it from the deck, but an
-ancient lamp of bronze swung slowly from the beams
-overhead, and in this lamp burnt a flame, although there
-was neither wick nor oil to feed it. The witch was<span class="pagenum" id="Page_362">[Pg 362]</span>
-sitting in a great chair like a throne, and before her were
-open boxes crammed with lumps of gold, which gleamed
-in the flicker of the bronze lamp. On the table lay the
-magic crystal in which the sorceress could see the future;
-and upon the high back of the antique chair, in which she
-sat, perched two ravens, grey with age, both of which
-uttered a low, hoarse croak as Torquil entered.</p>
-
-<p>‘“Mother,” he said, for all who spoke to the witch so
-addressed her—“mother, I would go home to my own
-country; I long again to see the face of my father and of
-my betrothed. Therefore, I bid you raise a favouring
-westerly gale; for, if you do not, neither I nor one of my
-comrades will put hand to rope on board this galley
-again.”</p>
-
-<p>‘With that the witch rose slowly to her feet. ‘Look
-you, Torquil Randa,’ quoth she, ‘whoso in this galley
-disobeys my orders, the elements, which are at my beck
-and bidding, shall overwhelm him.’</p>
-
-<p>‘But Torquil stood erect, nothing daunted. “I know
-your powers, mother,” he answered; “but as well be
-sunk in the sea as wander for ever upon its surface,
-homeless and friendless. You heard what I have
-spoken; I will not live longer away from kindred and
-home.”</p>
-
-<p>‘And so saying, the bold mutineer left the cabin.
-Tronda followed him on deck, muttering her Lapland
-rhymes, and waving her arms aloft in the air. As she
-did so, great banks of black clouds began to rise from out
-the ocean, and the sea-birds flew round the masts of the
-galley, screaming with affright. There was a dead calm
-in the air, and it grew so hot that the mariners gasped
-for breath. The bright tropic day, shipmates, seemed to
-be changing into night, and the clouds got lower and
-lower until they appeared to rest upon the topmasts of
-the galley. All this time the witch was kneeling upon
-the poop, chanting her accursed rhymes, and Torquil was
-standing alone beside the mainmast, for his comrades
-were terrified, and slunk away from him as from a man
-under a curse.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_363">[Pg 363]</span></p>
-
-<p>‘Suddenly the witch stopped, and shaded back from
-her eyes her long flowing hair, gazing intently at the sky.
-In the next moment, a flash of lightning—so bright that
-every one on board the galley, except the sorceress, was
-dazzled and blinded by the glare—tore out of the dark
-heavens; struck the main topmast of the galley; and
-with a crash, like that of all the artillery in the world
-fired off in one salvo, passed gleaming down the wood,
-shaking the ship as though she had been lifted a hundred
-feet, and then allowed to fall splash into the sea. The
-explosion was followed by a thick sulphurous smoke,
-which seemed to come steaming up out of the inmost
-recesses of the galley, and while the crew, blinded and
-almost choking in the yellow sulphurous fume, were
-groping about the deck, they heard the loud screaming
-laughter of the witch, followed by the croak of the ravens
-from the cabin.</p>
-
-<p>‘At length the smoke or mist gradually cleared away,
-and as it did so, and the men recovered their eyesight,
-they saw Tronda standing as usual on the poop, with her
-old aspect of haughty command. Her first words, comrades,
-were—</p>
-
-<p>‘“Fling that carrion into the sea, and take warning by
-the fate of Torquil Randa how you dispute the will of
-such as I.”</p>
-
-<p>‘So the sailors advanced, all trembling, to the foot of
-the mainmast, where lay the body of the man of whom
-the witch spoke. He had been struck by the lightning,
-comrades, but there was neither scaith nor scar upon his
-flesh, only on the forehead a small round blue spot. So
-the mariners lifted up the body, and while it was yet
-warm plunged it over the side. It sunk feet first, and as
-the head disappeared, the crew thought that the dead
-face frowned.</p>
-
-<p>‘That night Tronda sat alone in her cabin, beneath the
-bronze lamp, as she had done when her victim entered.
-The crystal lay upon the table as before. All at once,
-the flame of the lamp flashed high up, and then sank
-down into the bronze, so that the cabin was almost in<span class="pagenum" id="Page_364">[Pg 364]</span>
-darkness, and the two ravens fluttered and croaked.
-Tronda lifted up her head, and her livid face became as
-the face of a statue carved out of blue and grey marble,
-for before her, standing as he had already done that day,
-was the form of Torquil Randa, with the blue spot upon
-his forehead where the lightning had struck it.</p>
-
-<p>‘There was silence for the space of a minute, and then
-the form of Torquil spoke.</p>
-
-<p>‘“I am sent from the dead,” it said, “to give you a
-last warning.”</p>
-
-<p>‘“Return to those who sent you,” answered the witch;
-“I take no warnings.”</p>
-
-<p>‘“I am bid to tell you,” said the spirit, “that the
-measure of your iniquities is nearly full.”</p>
-
-<p>‘The witch of Lapland rose erect, and stood confronting
-the apparition.</p>
-
-<p>‘“I have no fear of aught, either dead or living, spirit
-or flesh,” she replied. “Get you gone, or I will call up
-the spectres of the winds, who will chase you to the
-uttermost ends of the earth.”</p>
-
-<p>‘The figure of Torquil Randa gave a sad smile, and
-stretching forth its hand, touched the magic crystal,
-which immediately crumbled into black dust. “The
-powers which are given to me,” said the spirit, “are
-greater than yours.”</p>
-
-<p>‘Tronda’s frame shivered as she saw this, but she lost
-no whit of countenance, and looked her terrible visitant
-steadily in the face.</p>
-
-<p>‘“There will be given you one last opportunity,” the
-apparition said. “Will you repent?”</p>
-
-<p>‘“No!” said the witch of Lapland.</p>
-
-<p>‘The figure of Torquil Randa grew less and less distinct,
-and as it disappeared, the flame of the lamp
-brightened up again, and the ravens, which had nestled
-at Tronda’s feet, flew back to their perches on her
-chair.</p>
-
-<p>‘The next day, the galley meanwhile lying not far from
-Cape Tiberoon, in Hispaniola, there came on board, in a
-small canoe, a Spanish girl, who seemed, shipmates, to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_365">[Pg 365]</span>
-have hardly life in her to climb up the low side of the
-galley. This girl was of a beauty rarely seen upon
-the earth, but those who looked upon the bright red spot
-in her white cheek, and the sickly flash of her black
-floating eyes, knew that there was hardly a month’s life
-flickering in her bosom; so she went slowly into the
-cabin, and fell upon her knees before the witch.</p>
-
-<p>‘“Mother,” she said, “I am dying fast, as you can see.
-I have a lover, my betrothed. He is coming across the
-ocean to bid me farewell. Oh, that I might live to see
-him! I have little gold, but for what I have, grant him
-a fair breeze, that his ship may come to land before I die,
-and that I may give up my spirit in his arms.”</p>
-
-<p>‘So saying, the Spanish girl held forth a piece of gold
-the size of a walnut. Tronda had opened her mouth to
-speak, when a third woman entered the cabin. She was
-a tall and haughty dame, and as she observed the dying
-girl, a smile like that of a fiend passed over her face. Her
-cheeks flushed, and her eyes glanced with the fire of
-deadly spite. The younger girl started back at her
-aspect, and then sunk all trembling and sobbing upon
-the floor.</p>
-
-<p>‘Then the elder spoke thus—</p>
-
-<p>‘“I hate that woman. She is my rival. She has
-won from me the man I love. I would prevent their
-meeting. She is poor, but I am rich. This, for a wind
-which will keep back his ship, until she be no more.”</p>
-
-<p>‘With that, shipmates, the woman laid upon the table
-a lump of virgin ore, as big as a cocoa-nut. The other
-girl said nothing, but still held out her smaller offering.
-Tronda stood between them musing. At last, she took
-the large lump, and dropped it into the great chestfull at
-her feet.</p>
-
-<p>‘“You shall have a baffling wind,” she said to the
-jealous rival. The poor girl, who was dying, rose feebly,
-and passed out weeping; the crew let her down with
-careful hands into her canoe.</p>
-
-<p>‘But at the moment when Tronda had made her
-decision, the sudden moan of a hollow sounding wind<span class="pagenum" id="Page_366">[Pg 366]</span>
-passed through the air, and the galley rocked and
-laboured, as though an invisible hand had smote her.
-The witch remained long musing in the cabin, until,
-hearing the dash of oars, she rose and went on deck.
-The galley was deserted, the whole crew, embarked in the
-boats, were pulling fast for the land, while the horizon
-was again clouded as it had been when the witch drew
-lightning from the heavens. Tronda mounted upon the
-poop, and stretched forth her arms, to curse the faithless
-crew, when her eye suddenly fell upon Torquil, standing
-as he had stood, beneath the mainmast, when the levin
-bolt struck him. Then she forbore, and remained with
-drooping head, gazing into the sea below. But what was
-remarkable, was, that when the whole crew of the galley
-left her at once, instead of rising, she sunk still deeper in
-the water; and as a heavy swell began to lift and heave
-around, the ship rolled and pitched with a strange sickly
-motion.</p>
-
-<p>‘Then came another portent. Tronda still stood upon
-the poop, when she started to hear a sudden pattering of
-feet, and a squeaking and scratching all around her.
-Immediately there poured forth from every hatchway a
-whole legion of rats—young ones and old—brown and
-grey—all of them making for the side of the vessel, and
-then plunging with a loud shrill squeaking into the sea,
-which was speedily dotted with their little heads, all
-swimming merrily to land. When the last had leaped
-overboard, the figure of Torquil Randa glided softly aft
-and confronted the witch.</p>
-
-<p>‘“Rats,” quoth the figure, “leave a sinking ship.”
-And, as he spoke, the galley appeared to float in the
-water more heavily and deeply than ever, while the swells
-rose in great rocking billows, and the moan of a coming
-wind hurtled over the sea. Still Tronda confronted the
-apparition with a lip which never quivered, and an eye
-which never blinked.</p>
-
-<p>“My ancestors,” said she, “were champions and
-heroes; one of them—Eric Westra—descended into the
-tomb of Sigismund, the sea king, and bore from thence<span class="pagenum" id="Page_367">[Pg 367]</span>
-the bronze sepulchral lamp which burns beneath, although
-it was guarded by monsters and potent spells. What
-art thou, then, that one in whose veins runs the blood of
-such a hero, should tremble and quake before thee?”</p>
-
-<p>‘But the apparition said—</p>
-
-<p>‘“I come from a power which is mightier than that of
-Odin and of Thor, and I am commissioned to pronounce
-to thee the doom thou shalt undergo as a punishment for
-thy wicked sorceries, even until the end of time.”</p>
-
-<p>‘At that there rose a mighty wind, and the galley
-started away before it. In vain Tronda bade the elements
-to cease their strife—in vain she knelt upon the poop,
-and, with her drenched hair all streaming in the tempest,
-sung her magic rhymes and screamed out her most potent
-charms. The winds blew, and the clouds lowered, and
-the waves rose, unheedful of her spells, and so at last she
-started up from the deck, and cried in a lamentable
-voice—</p>
-
-<p>‘“Alas! alas! my power is gone from me, and the elements
-obey me no more!”</p>
-
-<p>‘At these words there was a flutter and a croak, and
-the ravens, flying from the cabin, soared up into the
-tempest-tossed air, wheeling round and round the rocking
-masts of the labouring ship.</p>
-
-<p>‘“And you too,” said Tronda, looking up at them,
-“leave me!”</p>
-
-<p>‘The sentence, comrades, was no sooner spoken than
-the foul birds darted off, each his separate way, and were
-speedily lost in the darkness. Then the storm burst out
-with all its fury. Had it been a bark manned by mortals,
-the galley would not have lived an hour in that sea; but
-enchantment kept it afloat until it had finished its destined
-course. For some space the Lapland witch and
-the figure of Torquil Randa were the only forms visible
-in the ship. But as the night fell, and the darkness
-grew intense, pale flashes of lightning showed troops of
-phantoms upon the deck, who worked the ropes and sails
-as mariners in a gale. These shapes, comrades, were the
-spirits of the seamen whom Tronda by her incantations<span class="pagenum" id="Page_368">[Pg 368]</span>
-had drowned. But still the witch stood erect and fearless
-through all this tumult of horror, lifting up her unabashed
-forehead to the gale, and flashing all around her
-wild grey eyes. The figure of Torquil stayed ever by her
-side.</p>
-
-<p>‘At length, comrades, in the thick of the roaring
-tornado, with all the gibbering ghosts dimly seen flitting
-on the deck amid the flying spray and foam, there was
-shouted from the prows, in a voice which boomed like
-the tones of a church bell, “Land.”</p>
-
-<p>‘At this the spectre of the Norse mariner turned to
-Tronda, and said—</p>
-
-<p>‘“Now hear your doom. From this time forth you
-will haunt the cape on which we are driving; and there
-you will have power over the winds which blow. Your
-evil nature, which is as a mighty devil within you, will
-ever impel you to retard rather than to advance the
-course of mariners; but yet, for every moment of time a
-ship is hindered on her course, will you pass a year of
-torment, such as it is not in the breast of man to conceive.
-And this shall last even to the day when the sea shall
-give up its dead.”</p>
-
-<p>‘In a moment after, mates, the galley was crushed
-into splinters, and not a vestige of her, or of her precious
-cargo of pearls, and jewels, and gold, were ever seen by
-man. But Tronda, the evil spirit of Cape Morant, still
-haunts that desolate beach and these stormy breakers,
-and sometimes in wild mid-watches, the mariner has
-caught a glimpse of her pale face and stony eyes, and
-floating locks, driving through the scud of the storm,
-with her arms tossed above her head, as though she were
-still singing the chaunt which raised wind and waves. I
-never spoke, comrades, with those who saw her; but I
-have heard tell of a sailor of Sir Francis Drake, who
-being, in a night of storm, clinging to the end of the
-bowsprit furling a split sail, beheld the ancient face of
-the hag, with her grey, fishy eyes, looking into his own,
-and who came near letting go hold of the spar in his
-fright, and tumbling into the boiling sea below. But he<span class="pagenum" id="Page_369">[Pg 369]</span>
-managed to make his way, all pale and shaking, on board
-the ship, where he told what he had witnessed; and
-certain old men of the crew said it was a most evil omen,
-and that either the ship would be lost, or he who saw the
-appearance would be drowned. Now, word being passed
-through the ship of what had happened, it came to the
-ears of the stout-hearted admiral himself; and presently
-Sir Francis appeared out of the main cabin.</p>
-
-<p>‘“What is this I hear, men,” says he, “that one of
-you has been frightened by a demon?”</p>
-
-<p>‘“It was the devil, Sir Francis!” said the sailor, by
-name James Gilbert.</p>
-
-<p>‘“And what if it were?” quoth the admiral. “He is
-but a coward. If he shows his face to you again, pluck
-the grisly fiend by the beard. The devil fears all who
-do not fear him.”</p>
-
-<p>‘But for all these bold words of the admiral, the old
-sailors were right. Before the ship had made Porto Bello,
-whither she was bound, Gilbert was flung from the lee
-foretop-sail yard-arm into the sea. After the first plunge,
-he never came to the surface, and the old sailors knew
-that what had happened was in consequence of his
-having seen the demon who haunts Point Morant.’</p>
-
-
-<hr class="r10">
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XXVII">CHAPTER XXVII.<br><br>
-<span class="fs80">WHAT HAPPENS ABOARD THE ‘SAUCY SUSAN’—AND THE ENDING<br>
-OF HER AND HER CREW.</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p>Three days after we boarded the ‘Saucy Susan’ I was
-the look-out man during a dark mid-watch. The wind
-was fresh, the sea high, and we were plunging rapidly
-along; the sails straining and surging, and the masts
-and rigging cracking with the pressure. I was
-standing on the heel of the bowsprit, with my arm
-round the forestay to balance myself, and occasionally
-ducking and stooping as I best could to avoid the cold
-showers of brine which our sharp bows tore up, when<span class="pagenum" id="Page_370">[Pg 370]</span>
-some one pulled my doublet, and, looking round, I saw
-Rumbold.</p>
-
-<p>‘Is there any one about?’ quoth he; ‘I want to speak
-to you privately.’ But the breeze, although it blew
-strong, was steady, and the watch lay dozing under the
-lee of the long-boat between the masts.</p>
-
-<p>‘My mind misgives me,’ says Rumbold, presently,
-‘that they have a design on me. That fellow Nixon
-watches every motion as a cat does a mouse. I know
-that Jerry, Le Chiffon Rouge, and he, are aware that I
-have pearls about me, and I go in constant dread. Did
-you see the three rogues to-day, how long and how
-earnestly they talked, and what sly glances they, every
-one of them, threw at me? It was ticklish work living
-among the Spaniards at the Rio de la Hacha, but I
-warrant you I feel never a bit more comfortable among
-my countrymen here.’</p>
-
-<p>I inquired where Jerry, the Captain, and Nixon were?</p>
-
-<p>Rumbold replied, that they were all three drinking in
-the great cabin, and that being pretty far gone, he had
-been able to slip out to seek me.</p>
-
-<p>‘Now,’ quoth he, ‘I don’t intend that these rascals
-shall have my pearls, if I can keep them—and what is
-more, I don’t intend that they shall have them, even
-although I may not be able to keep them—they shall go
-into the sea, which they came out of, first.’</p>
-
-<p>I said, that surely the fellows would not murder him
-for his wealth.</p>
-
-<p>‘Well,’ he answered, ‘they would not murder, if they
-could steal without it—but if they can’t, I do not suppose
-that a throat or so cut, would make much difference.’</p>
-
-<p>Upon this I replied, heartily shaking Rumbold’s hand
-at the same time,—</p>
-
-<p>‘You helped me, at my time of need, among the
-Spaniards. Perhaps, I can help you now—will you entrust
-the pearls to me?’</p>
-
-<p>‘My good fellow,’ says Rumbold, with great eagerness,
-‘that is precisely the favour I came to ask of you.’</p>
-
-<p>And with that, he fumbled in his bosom, and presently<span class="pagenum" id="Page_371">[Pg 371]</span>
-drew out a sort of flat pouch, made of thin but tough
-leather, with straps which buckled round the body. We
-both looked eagerly to see that we were not observed,
-but not a soul could be seen stirring upon deck. A
-lantern, swinging from the weather-foreshrouds, cast a
-dusky gleam around upon the dripping bulwarks, and
-the wet and slippery planks—but we were alone.</p>
-
-<p>‘Hush!’ says he, softly. ‘The pearls are in this
-pouch—there is a good thousand pounds worth—strap
-the belt tightly round you, under your clothes, the first
-time you have an opportunity. If you deliver it up to
-me safely at Jamaica, a third of the profits shall be yours—if
-anything happens to me, I make you my legatee—keep
-pouch and pearls, and make the best of them.’</p>
-
-<p>He had hardly made the transfer, when a shadow
-glided darkly between us and the lantern. We both
-rushed aft as far as the foremast, and pried eagerly about,
-but not a creature was to be seen.</p>
-
-<p>‘Bah!’ said Rumbold, ‘it was only the light, swinging
-with the ship as she rolls.’ But my own belief was that
-some one had glided across the deck, and mounted the
-weather-forerigging. I had not time, however, to communicate
-my thoughts to Rumbold, when we heard loud
-voices, and saw a glimmering of lights aft, and immediately
-Jerry came forwards, walking not very steadily, although
-he had good sea-legs, and clinging to the rigging,
-when the ship made a wilder lurch than ordinary.</p>
-
-<p>‘Farewell—take care!’ exclaimed Rumbold. ‘I must
-not be seen here.’</p>
-
-<p>So saying, he slid over to leeward, and crept aft, under
-the black shadow of the sails. Meantime, Jerry approached,
-and taking the lantern from the forerigging,
-grasped my shoulder, and asked me—in a thick voice and
-with a hiccup—whether all was well? I replied in the
-affirmative: upon which he steadied himself on the deck
-as well as he could, and began to hum over a song to himself—sometimes
-stopping to put the same question to
-me, half a dozen times over, after the manner of a drunken
-man—when, all at once, the ship giving a violent lee-lurch,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_372">[Pg 372]</span>
-he was pitched bodily against the bulwarks, and at the
-same moment a heavy marline spike fell with a crash from
-the rigging, tearing up white splinters in the deck. Had
-it not been for that lucky lurch, that sharp and ponderous
-iron would have cleft the mate’s head. All this happened
-in a moment, but the weapon had hardly struck
-the deck, when Jerry bounded to his legs, and with a tremendous
-oath, that there was treachery somewhere, called
-to me to go aloft in the weather-rigging, while he took
-the lee. The danger he had escaped seemed to have
-sobered the mate at once. I sprung into the tightened
-shrouds, half bewildered at the thing, while Jerry screamed
-to me, from the opposite rigging, to look sharp and take
-care of a knife-thrust, for he was certain it was that
-villainous Portuguese dog who had flung the marline
-spike.</p>
-
-<p>Up we both went into the rocking rigging. We climbed
-over the rail of the foretop at the same moment, and I
-saw that Jerry held the barrel of a small pistol between
-his teeth.</p>
-
-<p>‘The murthering rogue!’ he cried. ‘But he has made
-his last cast—either he or I go down on that deck a dead
-man!’</p>
-
-<p>We both looked up to the heel of the top-gallant mast.
-The white canvas was tugging and straining upon the
-bending yard, and the loose lee-rigging was rattling
-against the mast and sail.</p>
-
-<p>‘There he is—there’s the thief!’ Jerry roared, and we
-both sprang into the topmast rigging. Holding on by
-the top-gallant yard, I discerned a black figure, like a
-shadow, against the light-coloured canvas. All at once I
-saw its arm move, something bright gleamed through
-the air, and Jerry shouted—</p>
-
-<p>‘Devil confound him—he has sent his knife into my
-shoulder,’ and immediately stopped, grasping the shrouds
-as though he feared to fall. Knowing now that the Portuguese
-had no knife, I sprang rapidly up the shrouds to
-grapple with him. Just then, a faint watery glimpse of
-moonlight fell upon the ship, throwing a great shadow<span class="pagenum" id="Page_373">[Pg 373]</span>
-upon the broad sails on the mainmast, and I saw above me,
-crouched upon the yard, the form of Vasco—his grim
-face gazing at me, and his hands clenched, as though he
-was determined to sell his life as dearly as he could. The
-next moment, we had grappled together—neither of us
-spoke—but the Portuguese attempted to seize my throat
-with his teeth; I caught him however by his hair, and
-wrenched his head backwards, while I sought to gripe his
-right wrist and so overpower him. But the creature,
-although he had no strength to cope with me, was as lithe
-and slippery as an eel, and suddenly striking me a blow
-between the eyes, which made abundance of lights dance
-before them—I felt in a moment his cold long fingers
-twining round my throat, and closing upon my windpipe.
-In the instinctive struggle for breath, I let go hold of his
-hair, and at the same instant, a sudden and tremendous
-swing through the air, as the ship rolled violently below,
-made me clutch the ropes about me, or I should have been
-flung off into the sea, like a stone from a sling. At that
-moment the grasp upon my throat relaxed,—and with a
-litheness and agility, which were like the qualities of a
-monkey and a snake united in one creature—the Portuguese
-slid, as it were, from me, upon the main-royal
-stay, crawling and worming himself along towards the
-other mast. But Jerry, who had by this time recovered
-the first faintness from his cut, kept his eye steadily upon
-the rogue, for I calling out that he was escaping to the
-mainmast, the mate replied—‘Ay, ay, I see him:’ and,
-then, steadily taking aim, the explosion of the pistol
-re-echoed loudly, from sail to sail, and the Portuguese
-suddenly dropping his legs from the stay, hung to it by
-his hands only.</p>
-
-<p>‘Stand from under,’ shouted Jerry, ‘and allow the villain
-to drop clear. He has stabbed me as he did Shambling
-Ned.’</p>
-
-<p>Vasco uttered no sound, but he raised his legs again,
-seeking by a mighty effort to recover his position upon
-the rope. His feet had, indeed, touched it, when the
-muscles relaxed again, and he hung as before by his hands,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_374">[Pg 374]</span>
-swinging dreadfully with the motion of the ship. All this
-time, Jerry was clutching the forerigging, not having
-moved since the knife of the Portuguese struck him.
-The watch upon deck having been aroused by Jerry’s
-cries, and the report of the pistol, were running to-and-fro
-with lanterns, and some of them were ascending the
-rigging towards us, when Jerry roared out again—</p>
-
-<p>‘Stop—stop, every mother’s son of you, where you
-are till the fellow falls, and then stand by to pitch him
-overboard.’</p>
-
-<p>The Portuguese heard this, for he turned round his
-head to Jerry, and I saw his white teeth, as the wretch
-grinned in his agony. The mate answered this look with
-a loud laugh.</p>
-
-<p>‘Some of you there below,’ he cried, ‘go into the great
-cabin, bring up a flagon of wine—and we’ll drink to the
-murthering dog’s speedy arrival in hell.’</p>
-
-<p>The Portuguese now let go hold of the rope with his
-right hand—and then, as if to reserve his strength, hung
-for awhile with the left. I did not think that the man
-would have had such endurance in him, but he was of a
-light weight, and the muscles of his arms were
-strong.</p>
-
-<p>All this time he never uttered a sound. Jerry, too,
-held his peace, and the crew below waited in silence, with
-their lanterns glimmering on deck. There was something
-very solemn in all this—the struggling and tossing ship—the
-rigid figures of the seamen—the silence, except for
-the wind and waves, and the writhing creature waving in
-the air.</p>
-
-<p>At length, he uttered one loud shrill cry of mortal
-agony, which echoed again and again between the sails,
-and immediately afterwards dropped like a stone. I
-heard the heavy thump with which he crashed down
-upon the deck. Descending as quickly as I could, I
-found that Jerry, in spite of his wound, which was, however,
-only a flesh cut, was standing over the Portuguese,
-who lay all doubled up where he fell.</p>
-
-<p>‘Up with the hound, and over the side with him to the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_375">[Pg 375]</span>
-sharks!’ said Jerry, in a low stern voice. Immediately
-the poor wretch was plucked from the deck, and four
-sturdy fellows bore him to the bulwarks. He gave no
-sign of life; but just as they heaved him up for the fatal
-swing, the lanterns being all gleaming around, I saw him,
-his eyes still shut, make the sign of the cross upon his
-forehead. He was, therefore, still alive.</p>
-
-<p>‘One!’ cried Jerry.</p>
-
-<p>The four executioners, who seemed to like the job well,
-gave the wretch a swing.</p>
-
-<p>‘Two, three!’ thundered the mate, and at the last word,
-Vasco of Lisbon was hove a fathom from the ship’s side,
-into the boiling sea. As he plunged down into the brine,
-every one heard for a moment, and no more, such a cry as
-he uttered just before he fell from the rigging. Then his
-voice was choked for ever.</p>
-
-<p>I could hardly deny but that the Portuguese merited
-his fate; but the flinging overboard of a living man,
-without form of trial or condemnation, seemed a hasty
-and cruel deed. Nevertheless, none of the crew, except
-myself, appeared to be of that opinion, and most of them
-said openly, that it was a very good riddance, and that
-whether he had attempted the life of the mate or not, he
-was better in the sea than the ship. As for Jerry, he
-had his wound, which was, as I have said, a flesh cut on
-the shoulder, rubbed with brandy, and seemed to think
-no more about the matter.</p>
-
-<p>When my watch was up, I went below in no merry
-mood; and, presently, found an opportunity, while lying
-in my hammock, which swung among near twoscore of
-similar sleeping places, to dispose of the pearls as Rumbold
-had recommended. The grey light of the morning
-was coming down the hatchway, and I had not yet slept,
-for the end of the wretched Portuguese was still in my
-head, when there was suddenly a great thumping over
-head on deck, and an outcry for all hands to turn out and
-go to quarters. It is curious to observe, at this summons
-the sudden rousing of all the sleepers in the ship—how
-in a moment, grim heads start out of the warm blankets,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_376">[Pg 376]</span>
-and a whole legion of stalwart naked legs come down together,
-from a score of swinging hammocks upon the
-deck. But a sailor is soon dressed; and, accordingly, two
-minutes had not gone by since I lay in my hammock,
-when I was at my post, staring over the weather bow, at
-a small sloop, built very low, and which seemed to sail
-very quickly, which was running along with us, leaning
-over before the breeze, so that we could see almost the
-whole of her decks, upon which about half-a-dozen of
-sailors were running with sleepy scared looks, while the
-steersman was calling out and gesticulating violently.
-Looking forth upon the sea, I saw that a mist, almost as
-thick as that in which we had stumbled upon the ‘Saucy
-Susan,’ was just lifting from the water, and driving in
-vapoury volumes before the wind. It appeared that the
-mist had partially dispersed just before all hands were
-roused up, and that the look-out had directly spied the
-sloop, close to windward of us. If there had been less wind
-and sea, our small friend would very speedily have shown
-us his stern, for the sharp bows, and rounded sides of the
-vessel were evidently formed for quick sailing; but the
-heavy tumbling ridges of sea hove him so to leeward, that
-he had no chance with a more powerful ship. Meantime,
-Le Chiffon Rouge mounting into the weather-mizen
-rigging, trumpet in hand, hailed to the sloop to surrender;
-and Jerry, in a breath, roared out to know if the guns
-forward were all ready.</p>
-
-<p>‘She is a barco longo—a Spanish express boat, comrades,’
-he shouted; ‘and we must overhaul her despatches
-before we part company.’</p>
-
-<p>Still the captain of the sloop made no sign, standing
-very staunchly by the steersman, and conning his ship.
-Once he motioned to the latter to put the helm down, as
-if he intended suddenly to luff, and go round on the other
-tack; but changing his mind, he glanced at our sails, and
-continued his course. Le Chiffon Rouge again hailed the
-sloop to surrender, but still without effect, and I observed
-that in a temporary lull of the breeze she was beginning to
-draw away from the ship. Then the bull-like voice of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_377">[Pg 377]</span>
-Jerry thundered out along the deck—‘The first gun
-ready there—send your cold iron aboard of him!’</p>
-
-<p>Josiah Ward was the captain of the cannon by which I
-was stationed. His old dim eyes flashed up at the notion
-of a fray; and so, stooping over the gun and sheltering
-the priming from the wind with his trembling hand, he
-glanced warily along the mass of iron as it pointed now
-up to the zenith, now down to the billows, according to
-the motion of the ship, and at length suddenly dashed the
-burning end of a rope, which served for a fusee, into the
-powder in the pan, which flashed up, while the hollow
-iron belched forth its flame, and started back with the
-explosion, the carriage cracking, and the tackles rattling
-through the blocks, until the discharged cannon lay near
-the centre of the deck, its grimed mouth yet hot and
-smoking. The discharge was a lucky one. The ball tore
-a hole in the mainsail of the sloop, and just then a gust
-flying heavily over the sea, the canvas was rent from top
-to bottom with a loud harsh shriek, and blew fluttering
-in rags out of the bolt-rope.</p>
-
-<p>‘Back the main topsail,’ cried Jerry. ‘The run is
-taken out of him.’</p>
-
-<p>But just as the yard swung round, the captain of the
-sloop made but one leap down into his cabin, the sky-light
-of which was open, and directly re-appeared, carrying in
-his hand a small metal box or casket. He had not taken
-a step upon the deck, when I heard the report of a
-carabine from our ship, and the Spaniard leaped three feet
-into the air, and fell in a heap upon the deck, above his
-burden.</p>
-
-<p>‘That is the despatch box,’ quoth old Ward. ‘He
-meant to fling it into the sea, but Tommy Nixon was too
-sharp for him.’</p>
-
-<p>Just then Le Chiffon Rouge hailed in good Spanish
-that if any one of the crew of the sloop dared to meddle
-with the box, he would hang every one of them up to the
-peak of their own vessel. At that the Spanish sailors
-hastily retired in a body to the bows of the sloop, and our
-stern boat being manned, was lowered dexterously into<span class="pagenum" id="Page_378">[Pg 378]</span>
-the sea, a man standing at bow and stern to unhook
-the tackles as she touched the water. Nixon had the
-command of the boat, and pulled right aboard the sloop,
-the crew offering no resistance. The first thing he did
-when he got on deck was to wrench the despatch box
-from the grasp of the Spanish captain, who had been shot
-through the body, and was dying fast. The poor fellow
-lay in his blood upon the deck, coughing from time to
-time, and sputtering the thick gore from his mouth.
-Meantime, Nixon had two of the Spanish sailors brought
-aft to him, and after examining them, by means of one of his
-boat’s crew, who spoke a little bad Spanish, he hailed that
-the despatch box was all safe, and contained advices from
-St. Juan, in Porto Rico, to Truxillo, under Cape Honduras,
-and that he would presently search the cabin for
-further information. Meantime another boat had been
-got into the water, and I was ordered to form one of the
-crew. Jerry himself was in the stern-sheets, and presently
-we all leaped on board the Spaniard. The first
-thing the mate asked for was the despatch box. It was a
-very stout casket of lead and iron, but by means of a
-heavy hammer and a marline-spike, which he brought with
-him, Jerry very soon wrenched open the lid, and we, who
-were crowding about him, soon saw a good packet of
-letters, and despatches of different lengths, tied for the
-most part carefully with silk, and bearing huge seals with
-manifold devices.</p>
-
-<p>Jerry straightway sat him down upon the deck, and
-while the rest looked anxiously on, began with great
-coolness to peruse the documents one by one. They
-seemed to be but of little interest, for as he read, his
-brows darkened, and he crumpled up letter after letter,
-and flung them overboard, where they were soon floating,
-like so many white birds between the sloop and the ship.
-At length he opened a paper, sealed with black and red
-wax, which he had no sooner seen than he started up,
-crying, ‘Ha, this will do, even though there be no
-other!’ And then stuffing the letters he had not
-read back into the box, which he gave me to carry, he<span class="pagenum" id="Page_379">[Pg 379]</span>
-asked, in a sudden fierce tone, of one of the captured
-Spaniards, whether there was an axe in the ship? The
-man shrunk back from the question.</p>
-
-<p>‘Why, you fool,’ continued the mate, in broken
-Spanish, ‘I am not going to chop off thy head with it;
-but I tell thee what, if the axe be not forthcoming
-speedily, I may find means of making thee a head shorter
-without it.’</p>
-
-<p>So the weapon was duly produced.</p>
-
-<p>‘Now, Benjamin Mackett,’ says Jerry, addressing one
-of the first boat’s crew, ‘I heard you boast the other
-night how speedily you could fell a tree in Virginia.
-Take the axe, and prove thy words on the mast of this
-sloop.’</p>
-
-<p>At this the Spaniards, who guessed by the gestures
-which passed what was to be done, set up very dismal
-lamentations, and began to conjure us, by all the saints,
-to leave them the means of getting to land.</p>
-
-<p>‘You may get to land,’ replied Jerry, ‘very well
-under a jury-mast, but I intend that you shall be some
-time about it, or we shall have a score of pestilent
-armadilloes out swarming about our ears.’</p>
-
-<p>In the meantime Mackett, who was a sturdy fellow as
-might be, first applied the axe to the standing rigging,
-and in a very short space the shrouds and stays, cut away
-from their fastenings at the bulwarks, collapsed, as it
-were, round the mast, which, being thus deprived of its
-supports, began to sway and work with the rolling of the
-ship, creaking and cracking in its step. Then Mackett,
-flinging aside his doublet, laid the broad bright axe to the
-wood with good will. The white chips glanced about the
-deck, and in a few moments a gash was cut so deeply
-into the mast that I expected to see it snap short at every
-roll.</p>
-
-<p>Now,’ says Mackett, stopping in his work, ‘which
-side of the sloop shall I send the mast over?’</p>
-
-<p>‘Over any side, with a murrain to thee, so thou makest
-haste,’ answered Jerry.</p>
-
-<p>Mackett watched the roll of the seas narrowly, and just<span class="pagenum" id="Page_380">[Pg 380]</span>
-as the sloop lurched heavily, as a great ridge of water
-heaved up under her keel, he struck the finishing blow
-with such good will that the axe sunk a couple of inches
-into the wood, and with a crack like a musket-shot, the
-mast, with all its appurtenances of rigging and fluttering
-canvas, fell crashing into the sea, smashing to dust the
-light bulwarks of the sloop, and causing it to careen
-heavily over as the jagged and splintered end of the
-timber continued to rub and rasp against the side of the
-vessel, impelled by the heaving of the swell.</p>
-
-<p>‘And now, Spaniards,’ said Jerry, ‘you may get to
-Truxillo as speedily as you like, and give our compliments
-to the good folks there.’</p>
-
-<p>With that we all got into our boats again; most of the
-crew jeering at and flouting the disconsolate looks of the
-Spaniards, as they stood like men bewildered upon the
-deck of their crippled ship. Before I went over the side,
-however, I raised the head of the Spanish captain; the
-man was quite dead, and becoming stiff and cold already.</p>
-
-<p>Our oars fell into the water, and the boats were
-speedily hoisted up to the davits of the ‘Saucy Susan.’
-Then Jerry, going aft, touched his hat to Le Chiffon
-Rouge very ceremoniously, and presented him with the
-casket of despatches and the particular letter which he
-had read, the ship all this time lying to, but gradually
-drifting to leeward of the ‘Barco Longo,’ which now
-exposed but little surface to the wind. After a pretty
-long communion between these two worthies, Le Chiffon
-Rouge ordered the boatswain to call all hands, and
-presently the whole crew were grouped round the mainmast.
-Then the captain, taking off his hat, began to
-make one of his usual speeches, a part of his duty, in
-fact, which he appeared fond of, being of a long-winded
-nature, and given to using fine words on such occasions.
-The main points of what he now said were as follows:—</p>
-
-<p>The ‘Saucy Susan,’ as they all knew, was bound on
-a cruise to the Mosquito and Honduras coast, but,
-happily, they were their own masters, and could change
-their cruising ground as often as they thought fit.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_381">[Pg 381]</span>
-Well, here were certain despatches newly captured from
-the ‘Barco Longo,’ and as one of them related to a rich
-Spanish ship which was shortly expected in these seas, the
-captain proposed that it be read aloud in English, for the
-benefit of Messieurs the adventurers, that, upon knowing
-the contents of the paper, they might determine as they
-thought fit.</p>
-
-<p>The crew received this oration with signs of great
-satisfaction, and one or two cried out, ‘Ay, ay, translate
-the Don’s patter, and then we will consider.’ Upon this,
-Le Chiffon Rouge made a sign to Rumbold, who came
-forward, and placed the important letter in the pearl
-merchant’s hands. Rumbold looked at the manuscript,
-which was written in a fair hand, and then read out very
-fluently as follows;—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-<p class="right">‘From my House at Ferrol.<br>
-Upon such a date.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;</p>
-
-<p>‘Good and trusty Manual—</p>
-
-<p><span style="margin-left: 2em;">‘You having been absent at the mines in</span>
-Darien, when, in sadness and sorrow, I returned to the
-main land in the long-boat of the great galleon, reft of all
-the treasures which the ship carried, by the hands of
-plundering heretics, who, for our sins, the saints permit
-to infest the Indian seas, I was not able personally to let
-you know the particulars of our misfortune, and indeed I
-had but small time and less heart to write the story.
-You are aware that in a few days after reaching Porto
-Bello, to which place we scudded before the wind,
-which was boisterous, I found a quick ship sailing unto
-Spain, and having taken passage in her, we were so
-favoured as to avoid all pirates, flibustiers, and buccaneers,
-and sail very prosperously across the Atlantic hither.
-But as touching the Carthagena galleon, that was indeed
-a heavy loss, and I have made it my petition to the king
-that he will cause representations to be sent to their
-majesties of England and France touching the conduct
-and bearing of their subjects in our Indian seas. The
-manner of our capture was very sudden. Two days sail
-from Carthagena, we beating to windward, a sail was<span class="pagenum" id="Page_382">[Pg 382]</span>
-descried an hour before sunset, but which vanished before
-the dusk closed, so that little or nothing more was thought
-of the matter. As is my wont, I retired early to rest,
-the worthy captain of the galleon assuring me that all was
-well, and a very good look-out kept from all parts of the
-ship. But truly, our look-out must have been maintained
-with but sleepy eyes, for as I was dozing, just after
-having heard midnight chime from the clock in the great
-cabin, and looking half asleep half awake at the lamp as
-it swung to and fro, and made strange glimmerings and
-shadows upon the tapestries, I suddenly heard a tremendous
-outcry, and the running of feet upon the deck
-above, and then, Manual, a volley of musketry, and one of
-those savage ‘hurrahs’ which are the war-cry of the
-English, followed almost on the instant by a shock which
-made the great galleon tremble and surge from side to
-side. At that moment there came flying down the cabin-stairs
-our friend Collado, of the Hermitage Plantation, his
-face like unto grey ashes, and exclaiming that we were
-ruined and undone, for that while the watch on deck
-slumbered, being incited thereto by the calmness of the
-weather, a pirate schooner had suddenly laid the galleon
-on board, and that our good captain had fallen in the very
-volley I had just heard discharged.</p>
-
-<p>‘But even while he was speaking the uproar on deck
-was renewed. I heard the grating and rasping as the
-sides of the two vessels encountered when they rolled,
-and the fierce outcries and clash of steel, and frequent
-pistol and carbine shots fired while the pirates were
-clambering up our lofty sides and leaping upon the deck.
-They were devils, Manual. No man could resist them.
-They yelled and fought, and seemed to despise their
-lives; and accordingly, in a moment, and ere I could
-even put on my garments, in came the spoilers, rushing
-down the cabin stairs; a tall and strong old man, naked to
-the waist, and with a handkerchief twisted round his grey
-hair, leading them on, sword and pistol in hand. Thus
-were we constrained to surrender.</p>
-
-<p>‘Nevertheless, Manual, I must do our spoilers this<span class="pagenum" id="Page_383">[Pg 383]</span>
-justice: they sought not to harm our persons, and were
-even (in their way) courteous to us their prisoners.
-This I say specially of the leader, who was of lofty and
-somewhat dignified aspect, and whom they called “Captain
-Jem,” and sometimes “Stout Jem.”’</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Here Rumbold made a pause, as if to cough, and
-glanced slily at me. Oh, how my heart leaped as I listened.
-Honest, noble Captain Jem! No prisoners but
-what would have mercy and courtesy at thy hands! Rumbold
-continued—</p>
-
-<p>‘This old man presently desired to speak with me privately,
-and, quoth he, “There was one of our crew captured
-by Spaniards at Carthagena; tell me truly, is he
-dead or alive?” At this I bethought me that there had
-been, indeed, an English prisoner examined at the
-alcaide’s; for that strange man, Don José, had informed
-me of the fact, and also that the Englishman behaved
-very boldly when put to his trial; and this I told to the
-pirate captain, adding, that I understood that he had
-made his escape into the woods, and, although he had
-been seen in the streets of Carthagena at night, and hotly
-pursued, yet that he had given all his followers the slip,
-and got clear off, whither none knew. At this the old
-man wrung my hand in a strange fashion, and whispering
-me, “I loved that young man as though I were his parent,”
-added, “We make war upon you Spaniards, but
-we are no thieves; therefore let each man of you take his
-clothes and his private stock of money, and descend
-speedily into the boats. The ship and cargo we claim,
-but not the private goods of passengers and crew.”</p>
-
-<p>‘I give thee all these particulars, good Manual, because
-thou art deeply interested in all which befalls me, and so
-thou wilt not find them tedious. And so, presently,
-with sorrowful hearts we descended into our boats, and
-saw the galleon and the schooner trim their course for
-Jamaica. So far touching our disaster; now to another
-matter.’</p>
-
-<p>‘And the matter which concerns us most, shipmates,’
-said Jerry. ‘Go on, Mr. Rumbold.’</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_384">[Pg 384]</span></p>
-
-<p>I give the latter part of the letter with all its details
-although the information involved in it came at last to
-nothing. Nevertheless, I think it right to recount at
-length the document which caused us to change our plans,
-and indirectly led to the loss of the ship. The letter
-then ran somewhat as follows.—</p>
-
-<p>‘And now, good Manual, our friend and correspondent,
-Juan Gramada, of this town, designing speedily to send
-forth a goodly ship, bound to Truxillo, and laden with
-wines, cloths, laces, and divers sorts of goods proper for the
-Indian markets, I have advised him that he should cause
-her to pause in her course at a certain barren cluster
-of islets to windward of the Dutch possession of Curaçoa,
-and considerably to the east of the usual cruising
-places of the pirates, who, as I learn, do not often sail to
-windward of the Gulf of Venezuela. These islets are
-called <em>Isles des Aves</em>, or Bird Islets. I have landed upon
-them; they are not inhabited, save by countless flocks
-of sea birds, and they are full of good harbours and
-creeks, where a ship may commodiously ride at anchor.
-My advice, then, to Juan Gramada, and he hath taken it,
-was to let his ship pause at these islands, her captain
-having been there once before; and that, in the mean
-time, you getting this letter, as I hope you will, about a
-week or a fortnight after the ship sails from Spain, do
-dispatch an agent in whom you can put trust in a good
-piragua, or small sailing sloop, to the Isles des Aves,
-bearing intelligence as to whether the seas westward be
-pretty clear, so as to make the run across the Gulf of
-Darien as safe as possible. In case of your agent bringing
-unfavourable or doubtful tidings, then the captain of
-Gramada’s ship has instructions to direct the course of
-the vessel to any other port in New Spain, or to the
-Havannah, as you may think fit, where the wares can be
-disposed of to advantage.’</p>
-
-<p>These were the chief points of the letter, the remainder
-being devoted to private matters not of interest to any of
-us. But I started again when I heard the name of the
-writer pronounced. It was Pedro Davosa.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_385">[Pg 385]</span></p>
-
-<p>When Rumbold had ceased reading, Jerry took up the
-word. ‘Now, comrades,’ quoth he, ‘you have heard the
-news. What say ye, shall we continue our course to the
-south-west, or is there enough in that letter to make us
-haul our wind, and beat up for the Isles des Aves? I tell
-you that a cargo such as the writer mentioneth is worth
-looking for, and it may be that we shall in the mean time
-light upon prey as valuable running down from the islands
-as we should have met upon the coast of the main.’</p>
-
-<p>Upon this, Josiah Ward, being one of the oldest men
-on board, gave as his opinion that we ought to steer eastward
-for the Isles des Aves, keeping not far from the
-mouth of the Gulf of Venezuela, a bay which many
-Spanish ships were wont to enter and depart from. This
-seemed to settle the matter. The main-topsail was filled,
-and the direction of the ship altered from south-west to
-south-east, and then, with a hearty cheer as an opening
-to our new cruise, we moved away, leaving the Barco
-Longo, with her overthrown mast, sadly drifting on the
-sea.</p>
-
-<p>For three days we made good progress on our new
-course, descrying occasionally small sails, but none we
-thought it worth while to pursue. In the meantime
-Jerry was pleased to take much notice of me, and often
-sounded me as to my relations to Rumbold. I deemed it
-right, however, to give him but evasive replies. At
-length he entreated me one evening to come and crush a
-bottle in the great cabin, where he and certain others of
-the choicest spirits on board, as he said, intended to
-drink success to the new venture of the Isles des Aves.
-I was in no great humour for such festivities as I knew
-prevailed on board the ‘Saucy Susan,’ but of course I
-could not but signify my acquiescence. So, soon after it
-was dark that night, and having seen that the watch
-on deck were sober, and that everything appeared to
-be going on well, I repaired to the great cabin, where
-I found the company assembled, and already pretty
-jovial.</p>
-
-<p>The cabin in question was but a filthy hole, close and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_386">[Pg 386]</span>
-stinking, with the beams so low that none could stand
-upright in it, and the furniture all broken and hacked in
-the drunken orgies which often took place there. There
-were arms and coils of rope, and broken boxes, and
-casks half full of provisions and liquors stowed away in
-corners amongst dirty bedding, and heaps of sea clothes
-flung upon them, all wet as their owners had descended
-from the deck. Upon the present occasion the usual
-rank smell of bilge was overpowered by the fumes of
-tobacco, which all the company smoked, some of them
-seated at a table covered with mugs and glasses, the
-others where they best could, on casks, and boxes, and
-hammocks, or lying on the floor, upon which, for the
-convenience of those who had no better place, were scattered
-lanterns, that they might see their liquor and light
-their pipes the more readily. When I entered all the
-company were singing lustily a chorus to a tune called
-‘Ye Buccaneers of England,’ and having at length
-finished the ditty, I made my way as well as I could to
-Rumbold, and managed to get a seat beside him. The
-conversation then went on, Jerry’s loud voice and sturdy
-oaths bearing conspicuous parts in it.</p>
-
-<p>‘Doctor,’ quoth Le Chiffon Rouge to the surgeon, a
-lanky young man, more than half fuddled, but who was
-discoursing learnedly to his neighbour about the practice
-of phlebotomy as recommended by Galen—‘is it good for
-Shambling Ned, who came by the cut from Vasco’s knife,
-to drink raw rum.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Shambling Ned,’ quoth the doctor, gravely, ‘hath a
-skull so thick, that neither steel nor spirits can very easily
-reach the brain, and therefore—’</p>
-
-<p>‘Whoso says I have a thick skull,’ retorted the patient,
-starting up, to the great surprise of the doctor, who had
-imagined him not there, ‘lies in his teeth, and as a testimony
-to what I say, I fling this into them—’</p>
-
-<p>With these words he dashed a pannikin of raw spirits
-right into the doctor’s face, who started up, gasping and
-sneezing, and vowing vengeance, but was straightway
-pulled down into his place again by those about him, who<span class="pagenum" id="Page_387">[Pg 387]</span>
-comforted him by saying that brandy was not to be quarrelled
-with in whatever way a man came by it. Just
-then the highwayman, who had given me the account of
-his detection in Newgate, and who was seated upon a high
-tub, over which he dangled his legs as gracefully as he
-could, broke in as follows:—</p>
-
-<p>‘Why, stap my vitals! here be a parcel of cullies to
-call themselves gentlemen, forsooth, and brawl in their
-cups, like so many mumpers of Lincoln’s Inn. Take an
-example by me, bullies, who am the very flower of
-courtesy, having been noted therefor on every heath
-round London. For shame, gentlemen, for shame!’</p>
-
-<p>‘Ho! ho! ho!’ laughed the doctor; ‘here be a footpad
-teaching us politeness, and the rules of the most courtlike
-society.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Footpad in your teeth, Master Doctor,’ cried the
-highwayman. ‘I scorn the word. A rider, sir; a rider
-by moonlight, for the benefit of my health and my
-pocket.’</p>
-
-<p>‘I tell you, Harris,’ Jerry here broke in, his roaring
-voice bearing down all before it—‘I tell you, Harris, he
-lied to you. Curse me! I know the roadstead well. I
-ought to, for I groped in there in as dark a night as ever
-lowered on this side of hell, and boarded a Spanish bark
-that was at anchor, and made all the fellows leap into the
-sea in their shirts. A rare sight, I promise you; like
-geese flying into a mill-pond. Those who could swim got
-ashore, and those who couldn’t were drowned; so that in
-some sort they were all provided for—ha! ha! ha! send
-the brandy this way. Care killed a cat!’</p>
-
-<p>‘And so you made the dons jump into the salt water
-in their night gear?’ cried an old man, with a villanous
-looking face above a grey beard, and whose name was
-Cole. ‘It was prettily devised; but not such good
-sport as I have seen in the plantations. Od rot it, man!
-that be the place for your true sportsman. Why, I mind
-me, about a dozen years since, when there comes a cargo
-of cheat-the-gallows birds from over the water in a ship
-of old Lumper’s, he that hath the wharves by Rotherhithe,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_388">[Pg 388]</span>
-and behold you, some dozen of stout fellows being drinking
-on board, and getting the latest news of the bona
-robas down by Finsbury Pavement from old mother
-Black-i’-the-face, who came over then for shoplifting in
-the Poultry,—says Silas Blood, him who was killed in the
-Tortugas by Francy Doubledee, says he: “How’s the
-scurvy aboard this time, captain?” “Scurvy!” quoth
-the captain; “bad enough, I warrant thee. Here has
-been some dozen rogues put aboard, just after the gaol
-fever—and measly salt pork down among the bilge water
-there, plays the devil with them. Scurvy, say you? they
-are more like lepers than anything else.” “By God!
-then,” says Silas—he was ever a joking man, “they ought
-to be washed clean. Let’s duck the lepers from the yard-arm.”
-“Well, captain, you know, the rogues were not
-worth a sixpence to anybody; not a planter would buy
-such scabby dogs. So we had them up on deck, and it
-was the rarest sport, man, the rarest, since eggs brought
-forth chickens, to see the ragamuffins all screeching and
-yelling when they were triced up to the tackling and
-doused alongside, them being just all in a fever, as you
-may say, out of the hot blankets. We got the bona robas
-out of the fore hatch to see the game, and didn’t they
-shriek out for laughing, as the scurvy dogs went lick
-down into the sea!”</p>
-
-<p>At the conclusion of this delectable tale, the old villain
-burst out a laughing, rubbing his hands, which were
-shaking as though with palsy, and chuckling with his
-toothless gums. It was relief to turn from him to the
-highwayman, who was recounting stories of his exploits.</p>
-
-<p>‘“—But, good Mr. Robber, says she,” so was he
-continuing, as I caught his voice; ‘“but good Mr.
-Robber,” and she put her pretty face out of the coach
-window, taking from it a dainty vizard all fringed with
-lace of silk and gold, “leave me just one of the lockets,
-and I promise thee that when thou comest to be hanged
-I will send thee so gay a nosegay that all the pretty
-women from Holborn Hill to the Oxford Road shall cry,”<span class="pagenum" id="Page_389">[Pg 389]</span>
-“Ay, I warrant you, he hath that from his sweetheart!”
-And so I, shipmates, being the pink of gentlemen riders,
-could not but assent with a low bow, saying, “Madam,
-here be two miniatures, one set in gold, very massive and
-rich, and the other only in very ordinary stuff; I will,
-out of my admiration for you, leave you which you may
-decide on;” and with that I handed her the twain. I
-wish, comrades, you could have seen her holding a portrait
-of an old gentleman and a young gentleman in each hand:
-“Here be my husband,” quoth she, “very richly set and
-preciously adorned; and here be my lover, with no gold
-at all around him. Master Highwayman, affection is
-dearer than gold; I give thee my husband, and I keep
-my lover.”’</p>
-
-<p>The highwayman’s story was even more applauded
-than old Cole’s reminiscence of the plantations, and then
-drinking went on very hard, Jerry, in particular, tossing
-off bumper after bumper of raw brandy, and laughing and
-shouting verses of loose songs, so that he might have been
-heard a league off. All the thorough brute in the man’s
-nature was now becoming apparent. Most of the others
-were bad enough in their liquor, telling such tales as I
-have given specimens of, but Jerry swilled down his
-draughts of fiery spirits, and, as a dog which hath so far
-derogated from his natural instincts as to get drunk
-might do, merely roared and yelled, and caught at the
-men who sat near him by the doublets, cuffing and shaking
-them, and shrieking out that that was what he loved,
-and that they would all be drunk! drunk! drunk! together!
-Of those who kept themselves soberest, I
-remarked Tommy Nixon, who, I noticed also, gradually
-edging his way round to Rumbold, who sat almost silent,
-his acute mind and far-extending knowledge disdaining
-to clothe his thoughts in words, and cast them before
-such swine.</p>
-
-<p>‘Master Rumbold,’ said the worthy Nixon, ‘do you
-love oysters?’</p>
-
-<p>At that question I saw very well what the man was
-driving at, and watched him narrowly—‘Because,’ he<span class="pagenum" id="Page_390">[Pg 390]</span>
-went on, ‘men say there are delicious ones on the banks
-of the Rio de la Hacha! Perhaps you dived and picked
-up a few during your recent voyagings in that half-decked
-piragua, from the dangers of which we were so
-kind as to rescue thee.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Truly,’ replied Rumbold, ‘if by oysters you mean
-pearls—’</p>
-
-<p>‘Hush! speak lower,’ said Nixon; ‘thou art a sensible
-fellow, and being a gentleman, knowest that thy passage
-on board the “Saucy Susan” must be paid. As for me,
-I am not greedy, as all the world can testify!’ and here
-he dropped his voice to a whisper. ‘None but the
-captain, Jerry, and I, know aught. Let me make thy
-terms; it will be the better for us all.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Why, Tommy Nixon,’ said Rumbold, ‘I marvel that
-a man of thy discretion should go forth with a handful of
-salt to put upon the tail of an old sparrow like myself.
-Why, the pearls are all gone in the piragua, and I trust
-that by this time my agent in Jamaica hath them under
-very advantageous lock and key.’</p>
-
-<p>Rumbold said this with such perfect coolness, and with
-so frank an air of simple candour, that I hastily passed
-my hand inside my doublet to feel if the leathern pouch
-were really there, or if I had dreamed the whole matter.
-No, there was the precious burden, pressed against my
-bosom. I looked warily at Nixon; he seemed disturbed
-and vexed.</p>
-
-<p>‘’Twere better not trifle, Harry Rumbold,’ he made
-reply; ‘come, give me a ransom, and I shall let you
-off the rest. I can twirl Jerry round my thumb; he
-is only a strong animal and a good sailor, and as for
-Chiffon Rouge, he is captain but for our own reasons.
-Pay me a ransom, old Harry, and all shall go well with
-thee; come, only a small handful of the seed pearls.
-Thou hast got them cheap, thou old thief, thou knowest
-thou hast—come.’</p>
-
-<p>‘I tell you,’ answered Rumbold, ‘I have not a pearl in
-my possession. Search me an’ you like. You are too
-clever, Tommy Nixon, and you cheated yourself when<span class="pagenum" id="Page_391">[Pg 391]</span>
-you took me aboard. Search me, man, and be satisfied.’</p>
-
-<p>Nixon and Rumbold looked stedfastly into each other’s
-eyes for the space of a minute. The former, at length,
-muttered, as slowly as if the words were dragged from
-him by some other force than that of his own will, ‘That
-thou hast not a pearl in thy possession—that, Harry
-Rumbold, will be seen!’</p>
-
-<p>But just at this moment, a burst of discordant singing,
-led on by the bellowing voice of Jerry, drowned in a
-moment all the clatter of conversation, and the jingling
-and clashing of pannikin and glass. What were the
-words or what was the air of the song, it would be
-difficult to say, seeing that every man sang according to
-his own peculiar liking; but Jerry’s voice rose above all,
-hallooing this elegant stanza of a ditty common among
-certain of the Buccaneers—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry fs80">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">‘Haul, cheerily, jades of Jamaica,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">And trulls of Tortugas also,</div>
- <div class="verse indent1">The wenches have hold of the tow-rope,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">And across the salt sea we do go—</div>
- <div class="verse indent1">Across the salt sea we do go, boys,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">To the Sues and the Prues on the shore,</div>
- <div class="verse indent1">Where he hath no wife may find one,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">And he who hath one may have more.’</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>‘Excellent, upon my reputation!’ shouted the highwayman;
-‘Sedley could not have made better, nor Tom
-D’Urfey either. Well did I know both.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Sedley! Tom D’Urfey!—who be they?’ roared the
-drunken mate. ‘That song was made of a rare merry
-night, carousing in a burnt house of Maracaibo, when
-the place was taken under stout l’Olonnais and Michael
-le Basque. Here, more brandy; fill up, comrades. On
-your feet—your feet! He who standeth not, saving
-only he be dead drunk, will I cut down with my hanger.
-On your feet, I say, and do reason to a pledge. Here’s
-to our next carouse on the Isles des Aves—on the wines
-that come from Ferrol in old Spain. Huzza!’</p>
-
-<p>And the sots upon the floor, staggering to their feet,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_392">[Pg 392]</span>
-waved lanterns and flagons, and shouted and yelled with
-drunken voices—‘To our next carouse in the Isles des
-Aves.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Drink—drink, all of you—the liquor is free; it costs
-nothing,’ Jerry continued, staggering as he rose from
-his seat; ‘drink, I say, or I’ll cram an empty bottle down
-the gullet of every man that’s sober.’ And, with a
-drunken hiccup, he seized a lantern, and, waving it round
-his head, flung it to the other end of the cabin.</p>
-
-<p>The revellers shouted a furious chorus of applause.</p>
-
-<p>Meantime, the watch on deck, hearing the tumult,
-began to flock below, when their comrades seized them,
-and, with maudlin caresses, held up to them cups of
-drink, which they, nothing loath, swallowed greedily
-down. All discipline seemed over and gone, for not a
-soul was left upon the deck to tend the sails, to conn, or
-to steer.</p>
-
-<p>‘Comrades,’ cried Jerry, articulating with difficulty,
-‘I propose—that until the morning—the ‘Saucy Susan’—be
-left—(hiccup)—to take care of—herself!’</p>
-
-<p>Another loud chorus of approbation welcomed this
-proposition, the shouting and laughter being followed
-by the usual outburst of discordant singing and swearing.</p>
-
-<p>‘Here be what I like,’ vociferated the old sinner, Cole—‘here
-be true merriment! Keep it up. Pitch him
-who shirks overboard after the Portuguese.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Even so,’ says the highwayman; ‘first to go down to
-the bottom of the sea, and then to go down ever so far
-below that. The first part of the journey cold and wet,
-egad, but the ending of it hot and dry enough.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Here’s a stave, bullies, here’s a stave that they sing in
-Bridewell when the jades beat the hemp that hangs their
-fancy men. Give it mouth, bullies—give it mouth!’
-And here the miscreant, who had boasted to me of having
-broken every gaol in England, sang, with a mellow voice,
-for he was not yet quite drunk, having but just come
-from the deck—</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_393">[Pg 393]</span></p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry fs80">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">‘Up with your hammers, Bessy and Madge—</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Up with your hammer, Sue;</div>
- <div class="verse indent1">Plait their cravats for Joe, Tom, and Jack—</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Cravats they’ll grin grimly through!</div>
- <div class="verse indent1">Never hang head, girls, and never look glum,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Though they strap for it, all the three,</div>
- <div class="verse indent1">There’s stout fellows plenty are left in the world,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">In spite of old Tyburn tree!’</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>I would the reader could see the great cabin with all
-the drunkards in it, as now it appeared. Some sat in
-sodden solemnity muttering to themselves; some rolled,
-cursing and fighting, on the floor; others disputed and
-drank, trying, as it were, to outscream their adversaries.
-The watch on deck, who had but newly come down, said
-not much, but drank off great goblets of spirits, as if it
-were a race who should be intoxicated first; and so, in
-good sooth, in a very short space of time, the new
-comers were as madly drunk as the original revellers.
-But in all the insanity of the excitement, Jerry kept
-the lead. His face was all flushed and distorted with
-the liquor, and he champed foam and saliva from his
-mouth—</p>
-
-<p>‘Here,’ he roared, ‘a health—to the—good fellows—who
-cry stand and deliver—to the Dons. Bumpers, and
-no heel-taps! Huzza! up yees out!’</p>
-
-<p>And following his example, all the rest drained their
-glasses, and flung them in a volley over their shoulders.</p>
-
-<p>‘More honour—to that toast,’ hiccuped out the brutal
-man; and, suddenly drawing two pistols from his belt,
-he fired them right and left into the air.</p>
-
-<p>‘Huzza!’ shouted the others—‘huzza!’ and in a minute
-knives were flashing, and, amid shouts and yells, the
-cabin rung to some half dozen of pistol shots fired in
-imitation of the leader of the debauch, in the midst of
-which a wild screech rose from the darkest corner of the
-cabin, and Josiah Ward staggered out, his face all blood,
-and fell at full length on the floor.</p>
-
-<p>‘Ho! ho!’ shouted Jerry, with an insane roar of
-laughter; ‘a bullet found its billet. Caulk the shot-hole<span class="pagenum" id="Page_394">[Pg 394]</span>
-with the stopper of a brandy flask; it will be better in a
-man’s flesh than in a bottle to-night.’</p>
-
-<p>A scream of laughter answered this proposal, and some
-half-dozen of the company getting up, either to aid or
-mock the wounded man, fell in a heap, shouting and
-swearing above him.</p>
-
-<p>‘Nixon—Tommy Nixon—you don’t drink—Nixon—you
-thief—you are sober,’ yelled Jerry. ‘There’s mischief
-in it—comrades! mischief! But here, we’ll alter
-all that—bring hither that tub.’</p>
-
-<p>The tub of which he spoke was an empty bucket, which
-rolled upon the floor. It was immediately plucked up,
-and trundled along the table to where he stood staggering
-at the head of it.</p>
-
-<p>‘Now fetch me them brandy-bottles,’ cries the
-mate.</p>
-
-<p>‘Go easy, go easy,’ says Nixon.</p>
-
-<p>‘Easy,’ retorted Jerry, in his passion; ‘thou art but a
-cur, Tommy Nixon, to shirk the bottle in that fashion;
-but thy throat shall scald for it—there.’</p>
-
-<p>And at the last word the drunken villain caught up a
-flask of brandy by the neck, and smashed it into the
-bucket. ‘There, and there, and there,’ he shouted,
-dashing in bottle after bottle. ‘And now, Nixon, since
-you wont drink brandy raw, you shall drink it burning,
-my son.’</p>
-
-<p>In a moment, and before any one could interfere, the
-savage caught up a candle, burning on the table before
-him, and flung it all alight into the raw spirits.</p>
-
-<p>Rumbold and I uttered a cry of horror as the brandy
-flashed up in a blue flickering blaze to the very ceiling
-of the cabin, but the besotted company only shouted and
-cheered.</p>
-
-<p>‘Come, Tommy Nixon,’ roared the mate, ‘dip thy
-beak into that snapdragon—come.’</p>
-
-<p>And so saying, he grasped the man with both his
-brawny fists.</p>
-
-<p>‘Let go, let go your hold, you idiot!’ cried Nixon,
-‘you will have the ship on fire.’</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_395">[Pg 395]</span></p>
-
-<p>‘And what’s that to me!’ shouted the infuriated man.
-‘An’ you will not drink, by God I shall souse thy head
-in the burning liquor.’</p>
-
-<p>At these words they grappled, and yelling and cursing,
-they fought for a minute or two, staggering backwards
-and forwards, when the brute force of Jerry prevailing,
-he dragged Nixon up to the blaze, and dashed him
-head first into the flame, falling himself on the top of
-the struggling wretch, and upsetting the tub, which
-instantly sent a flood of liquid fire surging all over the
-cabin.</p>
-
-<p>Oh, then, the oaths, the yells, the frantic strugglings,
-which filled that hell upon the waters! Dozens of
-bottles had been already broken or spilt, and their contents,
-surging about, had thoroughly drenched the clothes
-of the wallowing brutes, who lay sprawling upon the
-floor. The cabin was, in a moment, one blaze of flame,
-in which men with their clothes and hair a-fire, and their
-faces livid and ghastly in the glare, leaped and staggered,
-and sought to clamber on barrels and casks, blaspheming,
-and screaming, and scuffling madly with each
-other.</p>
-
-<p>‘Up, up!’ shouted Rumbold, ‘up for dear life!’ All
-that I have described took place almost in the time that
-one sees a flash of lightning. In a moment, without
-knowing how I had done it, I was upon the deck, with
-my clothes and hair singed, but otherwise unscathed. As
-I drew in the first blessed breath of the fresh cool night,
-a loud explosion shook the deck under our feet, and we
-heard the tinkling crash of the cabin windows as the
-glass was blown out of them.</p>
-
-<p>‘There went a powder flask!’ cried Rumbold; and
-then, as if the word appalled him, he staggered back
-from me, crying—</p>
-
-<p>‘The magazine—the magazine—it is just beneath the
-floor of the cabin!’</p>
-
-<p>What I did for the next moment I hardly know. It
-is only a vision, of rushing to the davits where a quarter
-boat hung—of the rope flying hot through my hand—of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_396">[Pg 396]</span>
-Rumbold searching frantically for oars on the deck, while
-a blue flame streamed up through the sky-light and cabin
-stairs, and the shrieks of the burning men mingled in the
-roar of the fierce fire!</p>
-
-<p>But in that vision, I had one awful glimpse down into
-the cabin. May I be enabled to forget what I saw!
-The masses of fat meat, the dry bedding, the clothes
-scattered on the floor, masses of them being drenched
-with spirits, were all flaming together, while the drunkards
-rolled, roaring and scuffling, on the table and the
-floor, their flesh actually scorching from the bones! I
-say no more on’t. Would I could think no more on’t.</p>
-
-<p>Over the side went we with a single leap down into
-the surging boat. ‘Off, off—push off!’ And as the
-pinnace glanced away from the ship, tongues of flame
-curled and roared out of the cabin windows all round the
-stern. ‘Pull for life!’ We stretched to the oars like
-madmen, and the boat flew over the water. The mizen-sail,
-which was as dry as dust, for there was no dew,
-caught fire from the blaze, roaring up from the sky-light,
-and in a minute, the scorching element ran all aloft,
-blazing along the ropes, licking up the broad sails, making
-the strong canvas tinder, and lighting up for miles and
-miles the lone midnight sea! There! A bright sheet of
-red fire shot forth, as if a volcano had burst out under
-the ocean, the glare showing us for an instant, and no
-more, a vision of huge beams, and rent masses of timber,
-flying out and upwards; and then—just as we heard the
-sound of the explosion, not a loud sharp crack, but a
-smothered roar, which made all the air shake palpably
-around us—down with a stately swoop, fell the flaming
-mizen-mast into the sea!</p>
-
-<p>We sat in speechless horror—unable to move our oars.
-Then all the fire, low and aloft, disappeared with a loud
-hiss, and a great white cloud of steam rose boiling from
-the wreck, loud sounds of cracking and rending timber
-coming forth from the vapour, mingled with the gurgling
-rush of water pouring into and sucking down the shattered
-ship. After this, the white smoke rose and floated like<span class="pagenum" id="Page_397">[Pg 397]</span>
-a canopy, all above our heads, and we gazed and gazed,
-but saw nothing on the midnight sea.</p>
-
-<p>‘They are gone—it is all over,’ said Rumbold. ‘Lord,
-have mercy on their sinful souls.’</p>
-
-<p>To this I solemnly responded, with my heart as with
-my tongue, ‘Amen! amen!’</p>
-
-
-<hr class="r10">
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XXVIII">CHAPTER XXVIII.<br><br>
-<span class="fs80">THE FOODLESS BOAT AND THE ISLAND.</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p>We sat, for a few moments after the catastrophe, in
-silence. Then quoth I, ‘Let us pull back, there can be
-no danger now, and try whether there be any floating
-wreck with any poor wretch clinging to it.’</p>
-
-<p>So we were soon, as nearly as we could judge, floating
-upon the exact spot where the ‘Saucy Susan’ foundered.
-It was Rumbold’s opinion, that the powder below the
-cabin had been so stowed, that the force of the explosion
-when it took fire was downwards and laterally, rather
-than upwards—and that the sides of the afterpart of the
-ship had been actually driven asunder. In such case, of
-course, the sea would pour like a whirlpool into her, and
-she would have gone down, as had actually been the case,
-as though she were a lump of lead. The mizen-mast,
-with a heap of scorched and blackened wreck floating
-about, was the sole memorial left of the ‘Saucy Susan;’
-the mast in question having no doubt been broken by the
-force of the explosion, and so saved from going to the
-bottom with the ship. We rowed for hours and hours
-round the spot, returning often to the mast, as it lay all
-blackened and scorched, weltering in the sea, but no
-other piece of wreck could we see. Not a box, or cask,
-or spar, but seemed to have gone right down into the
-awful depths of the ocean. There was something curiously
-dreamlike in our situation. My mind seemed wavering
-and flickering as I thought of what had happened. Sometimes
-it would appear as though the debauch had taken<span class="pagenum" id="Page_398">[Pg 398]</span>
-place years and years ago, so that I remembered it quite
-faintly. In another moment I would deem that the orgy
-was roaring around me still. Then I would see the livid
-faces and fiery hair of the drunkards so plainly that I
-pressed my aching eyes with my hands to shut out the
-vision; and anon I would deem that it must be all a
-nightmare, and that I was still keeping the dreary mid
-watch upon the deck of the ‘Saucy Susan.’ But, no;
-when under the pressure of such a thought, I started up,
-my feet would slip on the uneven planks in the boat’s
-bottom, and I would start to hear the plunges of the
-mizen-mast as it rolled and wallowed beside us in the
-sea.</p>
-
-<p>And so the grey dawn came, and after it the sun, and
-we stood upon the seats of the boat, and gazed anxiously
-all round. The ocean was landless and shipless. The
-fresh morning breeze came merrily down, curling the
-black summit of the swells and flecking the sombre sea
-with white bars. The daylight, however, was a great
-relief, and we sat and talked of the terrible event of the
-night before, like two men telling each other sad dreams.</p>
-
-<p>‘We could have done nothing to save them,’ said
-Rumbold; ‘nothing. Every man was mad drunk, except
-Nixon, and Jerry had him clutched as though he were
-squeezed in an iron vice. They both went down, I
-warrant you, grappling each other. Their bones are
-lying in the wreck now, with their arms round each
-other’s necks, hundreds of fathoms under the boat’s
-keel.’</p>
-
-<p>I asked him what he thought of Nixon’s refusal to
-drink, which had been the real cause of the mate’s mad
-freak and its consequences, and Rumbold’s thoughts
-jumped with mine, when he said, that he nothing doubted
-that Nixon had determined, if he could, to fell him, and
-rob him of the pearls in the drunken riot. As he spoke
-this, I produced the shining morsels from the pouch.
-Rumbold looked sadly at them.</p>
-
-<p>‘For these gauds,’ he said, ‘two poor ignorant Indians
-have very probably been sacrificed, and now a whole<span class="pagenum" id="Page_399">[Pg 399]</span>
-ship’s company have gone to the bottom of the sea. True,
-they were villains almost every man, but the more need
-was there that they should not be hurried to their last
-account with all their unrepented sins crimson on their
-foreheads.’</p>
-
-<p>After some more talk in this strain, we roused ourselves,
-and began to converse of our own situation,
-which was bad enough, not having a strip of canvas in
-the boat to make a sail, and what was much worse, being
-without a morsel of water or food. By the best calculation
-I could make, we were near the centre of the
-Caribbean Sea, about half-way between Jamaica and
-Curaçoa. The regular trade-wind, blowing nearly from
-the north-east, might drift us, if we went before it, aided
-by the gulf stream, to somewhere about Cape Gracias à
-Dios, the great headland, west of which the main-land
-trends away to form the Bay of Honduras. Rumbold
-agreed with me as to our probable situation, and we
-computed the nearest point at which we could hope to
-make land, if we did not succeed in stumbling upon some
-of the small bushy islands or keys which lie sprinkled
-nor-east of Cape Gracias—we computed, I say, the
-nearest land that we could make without sails to be about
-six hundred miles distant.</p>
-
-<p>‘Well,’ said Rumbold, ‘we must try to get there,
-that is all; so let us set to work.’</p>
-
-<p>Accordingly, in about two hours, we succeeded in
-setting, upon one of the oars, a sort of tattered sail only
-adapted for going before the wind, and patched out of our
-shirts, by tying the sleeves together. Then pointing the
-boat’s head about west-south-west, as near as we could
-judge by the sun, we set forth upon our almost hopeless
-voyage, rowing at the same time to help the boat on, and
-going about four knots an hour.</p>
-
-<p>‘Four knots an hour,’ said Rumbold, ‘and six hundred
-miles to be sailed over; that gives one hundred and fifty
-hours or thereby, if the wind keeps as fair as now, and
-we row night and day. Now, one hundred and fifty
-hours make rather more than six days; add two days<span class="pagenum" id="Page_400">[Pg 400]</span>
-more—that is a reasonable allowance for resting and
-times of calm—in all eight days. Can a man live eight
-days without food, and, in this climate, without water?’</p>
-
-<p>‘No,’ says I, tossing aside my oar, and clapping—I
-confess it—my hands to my face; ‘no, we are fools to
-try it. Better to jump overboard at once among the
-sharks.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Take up your oar, sir,’ says Rumbold, sternly; ‘God
-helps those who help themselves. Work, sir, work.
-There are many chances before us. Perhaps an English
-ship—at the worst, a Spanish ship; perhaps an island
-with rain-water in the crevices of the rocks, and turtle
-sleeping on the sandy beaches, and plenty of birds and
-eggs.’</p>
-
-<p>The very words put new life into me, and we tugged
-away for a time as cheerily as, under our circumstances,
-might be. The wind blew so fresh that we feared it
-would blow our frail sail right before it. The following
-seas hove us, as it were, from one to the other, and we
-made better progress than we hoped for. But the heat
-of the sun, as the day wore on, was terrible, and we began
-to thirst. At night, by Rumbold’s advice, we washed our
-mouths with salt water, and afterwards, finding a pebble
-or two lying in the bottom of the boat, we sucked them
-to promote the flow of saliva, and keep our tongues cool.
-We tugged at the oars, but very faintly, until late in
-the night, and then we fell asleep over them.</p>
-
-<p>The second day was the same as the first—cloudless
-and hot. We stripped, dipped our clothes in the sea, and
-then put them on dripping; as soon as the hot sun dried
-them we plunged the garments into the sea again. It
-assuaged our thirst a little, but our lips and tongues
-began to swell, and turn to a horrid blackness. In the
-afternoon we were hungry for a short space, and directly
-afterwards sick at stomach, particularly Rumbold, who at
-length slipped down into the bottom of the boat, where
-he lay moaning. That night we suffered intensely from
-the cold, and our skins being irritated by the salt water,
-every motion was painful to us.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_401">[Pg 401]</span></p>
-
-<p>The third day several sea-birds swam near us, regarding
-us curiously, just as the marrot had done me when I lay
-drowning, as I thought, upon the spars of the ‘Golden
-Grove,’ in the Bay of Biscay. The breeze blew very
-strong this day, with a heavy sea. Towards noon I,
-standing on the thafts, holding on by the oar, which was
-shipped for a mast, descried a sail at a great distance,
-but, losing it after a few moments, said nothing.
-Rumbold, who had been by far the stoutest hearted of
-the twain at starting, grew weak rapidly; and, as his
-strength left him, his spirits drooped. He was, indeed,
-an older man than I was, and perhaps naturally not of
-such a strong constitution. He only rowed a little this
-day, and towards nightfall sank into a sort of delirious
-state, and raved.</p>
-
-<p>The fourth day I felt I was in a hot fever, and so weak
-I could scarce crawl. Rowing was now out of the question,
-and Rumbold and I lay staring at the sky, and at each
-other, in the stern sheets. We had suffered very little
-from hunger, but the thirst was terrible. The night
-before I had dreamed troubled visions of wells and cool
-clear pools, and, starting up, I had much ado to refrain
-from flinging myself in my agony into the sea. Towards
-the afternoon Rumbold said, with a sad smile—</p>
-
-<p>‘Cleopatra, queen of Egypt, drank dissolved pearls.
-Pity we have not the means to make the beverage here?’</p>
-
-<p>By sundown he was raving again.</p>
-
-<p>The fifth day the morning breeze was long of coming,
-and we watched it, with longing eyes, ruffling the water
-astern. Rumbold lay silent, as if worn out; his eyes
-had a glassy, fixed look, and there were black rings under
-them. As the forenoon wore on, he pointed to the water
-around, and I saw the black fins of sharks moving along
-with the boat.</p>
-
-<p>‘They know when death is coming,’ he said.</p>
-
-<p>The sixth day Rumbold was alive, and that was all. He
-took my hand in both of his, and whispered hoarsely,
-‘I have no wife—and no child—no one who will grieve—that
-is a great comfort at a time like this.’</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_402">[Pg 402]</span></p>
-
-<p>Presently black clouds arose out of the sea to windward,
-and began to spread over the whole firmament.
-I pointed them out, and besought Rumbold to take heart.
-‘Rain is coming,’ I said, ‘we will live to reach the land
-yet.’ He shook his head, and his eyes grew more and
-more fixed and glazed. ‘I told you—I made you my—legatee,’
-he muttered, with great difficulty; ‘think sometimes
-of the Peralta who helped you from the Spaniards,
-or of the Rumbold who died with you in the boat at sea.’
-All this time the black clouds became heavier, but still
-no rain fell. The air was like an oven, and the rude
-linen sail drooped motionless about the mast. I took
-Rumbold’s head on my lap; he was past speaking, but he
-looked up from time to time in my eyes. At length I
-felt his heart flutter, and presently the beating stopped.
-No change whatever took place upon his face, except that
-it assumed that thin pinched look to which men’s features
-shrink when death lays its hand upon them. He was
-dead—probably for some time before I was certain of it.
-When I knew that it was so, I laid the corpse gently
-down in the stern sheets. In half an hour the windows
-of Heaven were opened, and the rain poured down in
-bucketfuls. Oh, those blessed, blessed drops! I knelt,
-and with my mouth agape swallowed them. I wrung the
-dripping sail above my wet lips. I licked the water as it
-trinkled in large drops down the mast. I lapped it up as
-it accumulated in the little inequalities and hollows in
-the thafts of the boat. I had soon drunk my fill. The
-rain gave me fresh strength, fresh spirits, fresh soul. But
-as for Rumbold, the cool sweet water pattered upon his
-rigid face—the blessed rain drenched his hair, and great
-drops ran down his hollow cheeks—but it was of no avail.
-The manna fell not soon enough, and there lay the corpse,
-with its white wet face staring starkly up to the sky!</p>
-
-<p>Towards night the rain-clouds broke up, and the sun
-came slanting in golden bursts down upon the leaden-coloured
-sea. The breeze also began to blow again—the
-well-drenched sail caught the first faint puffs of the wind,
-and we moved forward—the living and the dead, upon<span class="pagenum" id="Page_403">[Pg 403]</span>
-our dreary path. It was very terrible, all that long
-night, to sit alone beside the corpse. The moon rose in
-all her glory, and the ocean gleamed like molten silver
-about me. The white sail showed before me like a pale
-phantom, and at my side lay the stark dead man, with
-his damp pallid skin glistening in the moonlight. A
-dozen times I made up my mind to fling the corpse overboard,
-but I saw those horrible triangular fins, how they
-glided all round the boat, and my heart failed me. At
-length, I stripped off Rumbold’s doublet and covered his
-face with the cloth.</p>
-
-<p>The blackness of night faded at length—then came the
-grey dawn and the red bright sunrise—the seventh I had
-seen since the ‘Saucy Susan’ went down. I must have
-been in a half torpid state, for I lay listlessly, with my
-face turned to the east, waiting for the breeze to blow,
-and the morning was already becoming hot, when looking
-languidly to see if the sail was properly set, I bounded
-forwards from the stern-sheets, as though all the strength
-they ever possessed had suddenly come back to my muscles.</p>
-
-<p>Land! yes—land! right ahead—not a mile from me—rocks,
-with the surf white upon them—sandy beaches
-glistening in the sun—knolls all green and bushy, and
-slopes carpeted with Bahama grass. Here and there a
-feathery palmetta tree rising from the underwood, and
-clouds of gulls and plovers, ducks and flamingos, pelicans
-and man-of-war birds, sporting or resting in the air, on
-the water, or the land. I was close to, as near as I
-could judge, a group of islets, the principal one being
-surrounded by many smaller,—some of them indeed mere
-rocks,—but rocks as I saw teeming with food, and brimming,
-as I did not doubt, in all their crevices, with fresh,
-sweet water, from last night’s rain.</p>
-
-<p>My heart melted within me, and I sank into the bottom
-of the boat, and wept, and prayed, and gave thanks.
-Meantime, the sea-breeze coming on to blow fresh, drove
-the boat quickly before it, and I had enough to do—steering
-with an oar to avoid the coral reefs, and spits,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_404">[Pg 404]</span>
-and banks of sand, between which I was hurried—and
-over which the sea went flashing in thunder. Several
-times the keel of the boat grazed the bottom, and we
-were swung round and round in the eddies and counter-currents—but
-still she bore me safely on, until we approached
-a fair sandy beach, on which the surf broke
-high. I could see no better landing-place, so let the
-boat drive, and tied myself, as well as I could, for I was
-more dead than alive, to an oar, that I might have a last
-chance of reaching the shore. In a minute or two the
-boat was in the broken water,—she rode over two or
-three fierce crests of tumbling seas very gallantly, but
-then a heavier breaker than common curling up astern of
-us, fell, as it were, down upon the boat, and I found myself
-faintly struggling in the white frothy water, which
-foamed, and buzzed, and roared in my ears, and down
-into which, at length, losing all sense and consciousness,
-I sank—a drowning man.</p>
-
-<p>When I opened my eyes again, I knew not where I
-was, or what had happened to me. I lay in a sort of
-half-waking torpid state, being dimly conscious that I
-was stripped and in a bed, and that above me was a roof
-of wattled branches, and that dark figures of naked men—Indians
-as I deemed, were moving about me. Then I
-felt a cup put to my mouth, and some warm liquid,
-which seemed to revive and comfort me, and flow, as it
-were, through my poor wasted limbs, warming and refreshing
-them, was poured down my throat, my head
-being raised by some one behind me for the purpose.
-But all this might or might not be. For all I knew, it
-was a dream of delirium. I was too weak to speak, and
-even to think,—consciousness forsook me again, and I
-fell into a deep dreamless sleep.</p>
-
-<p>I returned again to sense and life. I was in a bed, a
-hammock, laid upon a cool mat. There was a roof of
-wattled branches above me, and there were Indians, two
-very old men, with grey hair and grey beards flowing
-down upon their swarthy breasts, sitting beside me.
-Furthermore, I saw that I was in a hut or cottage,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_405">[Pg 405]</span>
-artfully contrived in a recess or split of rock; that part of
-the walls were formed of the natural living stone, and
-part of very neat and artificial wattle-work, quite wind
-and weather tight. The door seemed to open at the end
-of the passage, leading upwards from the chamber, which
-nestled, as it were, down between the rocks; and through
-this door, I saw bushes and long grass waving in the
-wind. The light in the hut was somewhat dim and
-grey, but I could see around me great numbers of fishing
-lines, and bows, and arrows; and, looking more closely,
-I saw in little cupboards, or niches, wrought out of the
-rock, stores of provisions, with drinking-cups made from
-cocoa-nuts and great shells, and rude clay-pots for cooking.
-But all the attention I could bestow was taken up
-upon my hosts. They were so like each other, that I
-supposed they were brothers; the same lank grey hair,
-the same brown or chestnut hue of the skin, the same
-rather flat noses, the same black eyes, so full of cheerfulness
-and kindness, and so completely the same expression
-of face, that I could positively see no difference betwixt
-their features. In all respects, save one, the ornaments
-they wore were also the same. Each had a sort of fillet
-of different-coloured pebbles, through which a string had
-been passed, placed round his head, and a similar adornment
-round his neck. Each also wore thin plates of
-gold dangling from his ears, but in the fillet of one of
-them was fastened a wing feather of the toucan; this was
-the mark by which I distinguished one from the other.
-Their dress was very simple. It consisted merely of a
-sort of bead-embroidered petticoat, or kilt, tied round the
-waist, and reaching nearly to the knee, and a sort of
-mantle of strange-looking fabric, very soft and fleecy,
-which, when they sat down in the hut or cave,
-they allowed to fall from their shoulders upon the
-floor.</p>
-
-<p>While I gazed at these Indians, they conversed softly
-in a language which I had never heard, but which was
-very soft and melodious. At length, seeing my eyes
-open, and fixed upon them, both rose, and standing over<span class="pagenum" id="Page_406">[Pg 406]</span>
-me, he who wore the toucan’s feather said, gravely, and
-in excellent Spanish—</p>
-
-<p>‘Be of good cheer, stranger, for you are among friends.’
-I was too weak to do aught but take their hands in
-mine, and try to press them to my breast. Presently
-the drink I had before taken was again administered to
-me, and one of the Indians going forth into the open air,
-returned with a savoury morsel of broiled fish.</p>
-
-<p>‘Eat, stranger,’ he said, in most sonorous Spanish;
-‘eat, and be refreshed.’</p>
-
-<p>Thus these kind Indians fed me by degrees, and
-caused me to sleep with soothing and stilling draughts, I
-eating, drinking, and slumbering by turns; but all in
-moderation, so that at length I was enabled to sit up in
-the hammock, propped against a chest, and to falter forth
-my thanks, and ask how long I had been lying in that
-dreamy state? They told me, nigh three days. I asked,
-if they had found me upon the beach. They replied, the
-two often speaking together, in a low chanting tone of
-voice: ‘Yes, they had, flung there by the waves, and
-near me a broken boat.’ I think my eyes must have told
-them what I intended for the next question, because,
-before I had spoken it, the Indian who wore the feather
-said—</p>
-
-<p>‘And also the body of a white man. We buried him
-beneath a palm-tree, when the moon was in the heavens
-and the air still. He sleeps well.’</p>
-
-<p>Then the other took up the word—</p>
-
-<p>‘Truly he sleeps well; but you have been preserved;
-for which thank the God of many names and many nations.’</p>
-
-<p>This was towards dusk. When it grew dark the
-Indians lighted a torch of resinous wood, which burnt
-bright and clear, and sitting by it, with their cloaks or
-blankets wrapped round them, smoked gravely from long
-pipes made of reeds, and drank, but very moderately, the
-rich juice of the palm-tree—I meantime regarding them
-attentively, for I was still so weak that to speak was a
-painful effort. At last, after a long silence, the Indian
-with the feather, turning to me, said, solemnly—</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_407">[Pg 407]</span></p>
-
-<p>‘I am called Buonahari, and my fathers were caciques.’</p>
-
-<p>The other then said—</p>
-
-<p>‘And I am called Behecheco. I am the brother of
-Buonahari, born but an hour after him. He is still a
-cacique, because our fathers were caciques, and he is the
-eldest of our race.’</p>
-
-<p>The first Indian again interposed—</p>
-
-<p>‘Our fathers were caciques of Guanhani, where first
-white men came. Now, there are none of our people
-there, and the island is called St. Salvador.’</p>
-
-<p>The second Indian resumed—</p>
-
-<p>‘When we die, the race of the caciques of Guanhani
-will be no more. We are the last; but still my brother
-Buonahari is a cacique, because the blood of our fathers
-is the blood of caciques.’</p>
-
-<p>I here touched my head where Buonahari wore the
-feather. He seemed to understand the mute question,
-for he replied: ‘The feather of the toucan is the crown
-of a cacique. If I die first my brother Behecheco will
-take it from my head and wear it; when he dies no one
-will take it from his head; it will lie flat and rot, because
-the caciques of Guanhani are no more.’</p>
-
-<p>At this point I became too far exhausted to listen to
-more, and the Indians bade me sleep again. When I
-wakened in the night they were still sitting beside the
-torch, singing, in their melodious language, a low, mournful
-chant, which presently sent me to the land of dreams
-again. The very next day, however, after a famous breakfast
-of fish and fowl, for now the Indians allowed me to
-eat as much as I would, and that the reader may conceive
-was not little, I managed to crawl out of the hut and
-sit in the shade of wavy bushes, stirred by the cool sea
-breeze. The abode was contrived, as I have said, deep in
-a ravine of rocks, half clothed with bushes and rustling
-grass, which were disposed partly, as I thought, by
-nature, and partly by art, so as artificially to hide the
-entrance to the cave—for it was rather that than anything
-else—from any except a very curious and a very keen investigator.
-But presently the Indians returning from fishing,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_408">[Pg 408]</span>
-they having left me still in the hammock, they led me slowly
-and tenderly out of the ravine, and forth upon an open,
-breezy space, a sort of terrace, amid the cluster of rocks
-in which was their dwelling, and from which I could look
-down upon the greater part of the island, which seemed
-to be some four or five miles in circumference, uneven and
-rocky, with abundance of bays and creeks on the leeward
-side, formed by smaller islets and natural indentations in
-the coast of the greater. It was curious to observe, the
-trade wind blowing strong, the space of smooth glancing
-water left in the lee of the island, and tapering away
-towards the south-west. On the windward side, the sea
-broke high upon the rocks, and Behecheco informed me,
-that in stormy weather the salt spray flew over and over
-the island from beach to beach. Among the bushes and
-trees there fluttered and coo’d countless flocks of pigeons
-and other small birds of brilliant plumage; and down by
-the shore, the fowls which wade and swim dotted all the
-grey rocks, and glancing shingle beds, and fair beaches of
-hard dry sand.</p>
-
-<p>I sat long enjoying the prospect, the Indians being
-gravely squatted beside me; then I asked if there were
-other inhabitants of the isle except themselves?</p>
-
-<p>They replied, ‘No. None else.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Did not privateers sometimes come there?’</p>
-
-<p>‘Ships of white men of divers nations sometimes come,’
-replied Behecheco; ‘but then we mostly hide closely in
-the cave. The sailors land, and seek for turtle, and perhaps
-pigeons. Then they go away again, and we come
-forth.’</p>
-
-<p>I then prayed them to tell me how long they had lived
-in that solitude, and from what land they came? Buonahari
-replied a follows:—</p>
-
-<p>‘Nigh two-score of years have passed away since we
-landed upon this island in a canoe. We fled here from
-Hispaniola, where we were slaves to the Spaniards. It
-was when we were slaves that we learned the tongue in
-which we now speak to you. Still we know that you are
-not a Spaniard, for your skin is too white, and your eyes<span class="pagenum" id="Page_409">[Pg 409]</span>
-are blue. You are, perhaps, then, one of those nations
-which come from across the ocean, and make war on the
-Spaniards?’</p>
-
-<p>Having assented to this conjecture, the Indian resumed
-thus:—</p>
-
-<p>‘We were slaves in Hispaniola, my brother Behecheco
-and I. We dug in the mines for gold. Our father and
-mother were also slaves—they also dug in the mines for
-gold. Their father and mother were likewise slaves, and
-they likewise dug in the mines for gold. So it was with
-our family for five descents. We were slaves in Hispaniola.
-But when our father and mother died, I said to
-my brother, “We are strong. We know the ways of the
-mountains. We have found in the woods the plant, which,
-strewed upon the path of a flying man, causes the bloodhound
-to lose the scent. Let us be no longer slaves—let
-us flee.” As I said, so we did. We fled from the mines.
-The Spaniards pursued us, but the blood-hounds lost the
-scent, and we came to the sea. There we hollowed a tree
-into a great canoe, according as the traditions of our
-fathers had taught us—and in this canoe we put to sea,
-drifting before the wind. We had water, and meal, and
-cassava, and fruits, and in half a moon we saw this island
-and landed on it. Here we have continued to live, and
-here we will die.’</p>
-
-<p>I was much interested in this account, for I conjectured
-that the Indians were descendants of the race of original
-inhabitants of the Leeward or Lucayas group, now
-called the Bahama Islands, which the Spaniards had first
-discovered, and from which they had, about fifteen years
-after the first voyage of Columbus, inveigled a great number
-of the inhabitants to make them slaves in Cuba and
-Hispaniola. This I say was my conjecture, and it was
-speedily verified.</p>
-
-<p>‘I have said,’ continued Behecheco, ‘that the blood in
-our veins is the blood of ancient caciques—the caciques
-of Guanhani. Though we were slaves, we had that blood
-still. Our father told us so. His father told him. We
-speak the old language of Guanhani, for it was taught us<span class="pagenum" id="Page_410">[Pg 410]</span>
-in our childhood. We worship the old gods of Guanhani,
-for we were instructed so to do in our childhood, and we
-could recount to you the beautiful things of Guanhani,
-the trees and the rocks, the rivers and the shores, the
-hills and the streams, the birds and the beasts, although
-we never saw them. Our father, who taught us, never
-saw them. His father, who taught him, never saw them.
-But ever from father to son, and mother to daughter,
-there flows the knowledge of what our race was once, and
-what land it ruled over. Now, alas! that knowledge is
-to perish, even as water sinks in dry sand.’</p>
-
-<p>I thought, as the Indian spoke thus, that both the
-brothers experienced some kind of satisfaction in recounting
-to another the secret, which would otherwise die with
-them, and thus keeping it a little longer floating in the
-world. Presently, after their accustomed fashion of alternate
-speaking, Buonahari chimed in—</p>
-
-<p>‘Our forefather, who came from Guanhani and Hispaniola,
-was the son of him who was cacique in Guanhani,
-when the white men landed upon it, and said, “Here is a
-New World.” Five years after he began to reign, there
-came many ships with white men. Our forefathers
-thought that the white men were gods come down from
-the sun, and they honoured them, and feared them. Then
-said the white men—“Would you see again your fathers
-and your mothers, who have died and gone to the happy
-valleys—to the land of Coyaba—to that land where are
-cool shades and delicious fruits—where the drought burns
-not up the ground—and the hurricane tears not up the
-trees? If you would go thither, come into our ships and
-we will sail with you to Coyaba, and we will also see your
-departed friends.” So our forefathers believed the white
-men, and went into their ships, and the white men did
-not take them to Coyaba, but to Hispaniola and to Cuba,
-and made them slaves to dig for gold in the mountains.
-Most of our forefathers died there, and gradually the
-nation wasted away—but our family did not come to an
-end, but went on, generation after generation, until we
-were begotten, and with us our family will die, and the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_411">[Pg 411]</span>
-last of the race of Guanhani will be taken from the
-earth.’</p>
-
-<p>Both the old men spoke as though they had already
-outlived all sorrow for their lot. Their words and gestures
-were grave and solemn, but not mournful, for their
-trust was, that when they died, they would at length go to
-Coyaba, and see again all their forefathers, those who had
-been slaves in Cuba and Hispaniola, and those who had
-borne rule in Guanhani.</p>
-
-<p>In about a week’s time I was quite restored, and daily
-went a hunting and a fishing with my Indian hosts. I
-had told them my story, to which they listened eagerly,
-and I had assured them, that if, perchance, there should
-come to the island a ship manned by my countrymen, and
-which might carry me away, that I would reveal to none
-the secret of their habitation, but leave them undisturbed
-in their solitary abode. I made them lead me also to
-where Rumbold lay buried beneath the palm. It was a
-breezy, sunny spot, and upon the turf I piled a little heap,
-or cairn of stones, such as, in Scotland, where they are
-found heaped on dreary moors, and among lone hills, are
-said by the country-people to mark the grave of a hero.
-Weeks glided away thus. The old Indians were always
-the same—grave, courteous, and kind. They fished, and
-set snares for birds, when they wanted them for food, but
-killed none wantonly. They ever went together, and
-with the same slow, stately step. Their talk was almost
-always of Coyaba, and the friends who had gone before
-them, and who they would meet there. In short, their
-demeanour and their speech were those of men whose
-minds were set upon the things of the new world into
-which they were soon to enter. The space between them
-and death was short, and their eyes seemed to be able to
-look beyond it, and to care little for what was on this
-side of the dark river. Notwithstanding, however, I
-drew from them many traditionary accounts of their
-people before white men had visited them; and one night,
-in particular, I asked whether there had been handed
-down any remembrance of the first white men who landed<span class="pagenum" id="Page_412">[Pg 412]</span>
-upon Guanhani—they being, indeed, no other than Columbus
-and his followers. To this question, Buonahari
-readily answered, that he had often heard from his father
-the full account of that event, as it had been handed
-down, and that, if I pleased, he would narrate it. Then,
-filling his cup with palm-wine, and trimming the torch,
-which cast a sparkling glow upon the rock-walls and
-wattled roof of the hut—the descendant of the caciques
-began the tale.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="r10">
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XXIX">CHAPTER XXIX.<br><br>
-<span class="fs80">THE DISCOVERY OF A NEW WORLD.</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p>The name of my forefather, who reigned in Guanhani
-when white men first came there was the same as mine,
-Buonahari. He was a good cacique, and the people
-loved him; he ruled the island, and none disputed his sway.
-Then there was great plenty in the land; the
-earth bore her fruits, and the people subsisted upon
-them. There were no fish caught with hook, or spear, or
-net; and no birds with snare or arrow. The people ate
-only what grew—the fruits of the ground and the corn,
-and about the hut of each man was the field of maize
-which he cultivated. Then were the gods worshipped
-piously—the gods who sent the good things the people
-enjoyed. There were songs and dancing through all the
-land. The people met in the evenings, and lighted great
-fires upon the altars, and then the young men and the
-maidens danced, and the old men and their wives looked
-on, and the Bohitos, that is, the priests and the bards,
-sang songs in praise of the gods.</p>
-
-<p>One night there was a great feast of singing and
-dancing before the hut where my forefather, the cacique,
-dwelt down by the sea. All the people of the village
-were there, for the cacique and the chief of the Bohitos
-had caused proclamation to be made that every man and
-every woman should come forth from their huts to dance
-and sing and praise Zemi, the greatest of the gods.</p>
-
-<p>Now, when the night was dark, and the songs of the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_413">[Pg 413]</span>
-people were loud, the chief of the Bohitos came to my
-forefather, the cacique, and said—</p>
-
-<p>‘Why are not all the young men at the festival?’</p>
-
-<p>And the cacique answered, ‘They are at the festival;
-they have come from the woods and the sea to praise
-Zemi.’</p>
-
-<p>But the chief of the Bohitos answered, ‘Not so—look!
-there is a light upon the sea.’</p>
-
-<p>Then my forefather caused search to be made, but all
-the canoes were drawn up upon the beach above the surf.
-Still there was a light upon the sea. And the chief
-Bohito said—</p>
-
-<p>‘It is Zemi, who looks at our festival from the sea.’</p>
-
-<p>At these words all the people were glad, and redoubled
-their songs and their praise. Presently a flash of
-lightning, and a loud roar of thunder, came across the
-water, and the chief of the Bohitos and the people were
-troubled, for they thought that Zemi was speaking in
-anger. And the Bohito said to my forefather—</p>
-
-<p>‘Saw you ever thunder and lightning so close to the
-ocean?’</p>
-
-<p>And my forefather answered, ‘Never.’</p>
-
-<p>Then sad thoughts and ominous whispers began to
-spread among all the crowd; and the dances ceased, and
-the songs of praise died away, and the fire went out that
-was kindled on the altar of Zemi. Still the light burned
-bright upon the sea; and presently two lights shone; and
-after that three.</p>
-
-<p>‘There are three gods watching us,’ said my forefather;
-but the Bohito answered never a word. None went to
-rest that night, but tarried sadly on the beach waiting
-the day. The darkness paled away, and the people saw
-three mighty shadows on the sea. The grey of the dawn
-brightened into the day, and the people saw, as it were,
-three great houses on the sea—houses which floated, and
-which spread mighty wings to the wind, and glided
-to-and-fro.</p>
-
-<p>At this the chief of the Bohitos was troubled, and all
-the people were afraid, and kneeled down upon the beach,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_414">[Pg 414]</span>
-and prayed to Zemi; when, behold, the houses on the
-sea thundered and lightened as though they were black
-clouds in the air, and a great smoke rose up from them,
-and came with the wind down to the beach, and the
-people smelt an odour new and strange to their nostrils.
-But the prodigies were not over—great canoes came forth
-from the floating houses and approached the beach, and,
-rising from them upon the air, there swelled a mighty
-strain of music and figures, with faces all white, bearing
-strange weapons, which flashed in the sun, and clad in
-glorious garments, whereof none knew the name, stood
-in the big canoes, waving their arms and shouting in
-great joy.</p>
-
-<p>But one of the canoes came first, and on the prow of it
-was a man of a figure so goodly that he seemed a god.
-He stood up towering like a giant. There was glory on
-his forehead—there was holiness on his forehead. His
-eyes flashed like the eyes of the chief of the Bohitos,
-when Zemi enters into him and fills him. He waved in
-the air a glittering sword. He stretched forth his arms,
-and his big voice spoke tremblingly, and as if he knew
-not what it said.</p>
-
-<p>Nearer and nearer came the canoes. Then the man,
-who was as a god, waved his sword, and they paused, and
-he alone walked, with a glorious port, through the surf,
-which flashed beneath him, up upon the dry sand, and
-there he knelt down, and prayed and wept!</p>
-
-<p>But in a moment more all the white men who followed
-him plunged into the water and struggled to the land.
-First they knelt, as the foremost of them all had knelt,
-and each kissed the sand; then they knelt round about
-the leader, and sought to get near him to kiss his hand or
-his foot, while he stood erect among them like a palm-tree
-above weeds!</p>
-
-<p>This is a description of the cacique of the white
-strangers. He was past the middle age, but erect as a
-sapling, and sturdy as a tree. He had a thin, hard face,
-with a long hooked nose, and a mighty forehead, marked
-with deep lines like furrows. His hair was very short,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_415">[Pg 415]</span>
-and quite grey. He had shaggy eyebrows, and under
-them eyes which pierced, and of a grey or ash colour.
-He had a scanty beard, which hung in a peak from his
-chin, with very few hairs on the upper lip. He was not
-tall, but handsome and strong. On his head he wore a
-hat looped with golden chains and crowned with feathers,
-and his garments were all glittering and glorious, and in
-his right hand he ever held the naked sword! When the
-white strangers knelt to him, and when my forefathers
-saw the grandeur and majesty of his face, they felt he was
-a god, and they knelt likewise—the chief of the Bohitos
-and also the cacique. So the white cacique stood erect
-above them all.</p>
-
-<p>Then the white men placed in the sand an upright stick
-with a shorter stick crossing it, and all baring their heads,
-sang a loud song very solemn and slow, looking up to
-heaven, and making a cross with their fingers on their
-foreheads and their breasts.</p>
-
-<p>Meantime the cacique and the chief of the Bohitos
-advanced with fear and trembling, and prostrated themselves
-before the great white cacique. But he raised
-them with kind looks and gentle-sounding words, and put
-into their hands treasures—bright flat stones, in which
-whoso looked saw his own face looking back at him—and
-hollow vessels like shells, but bright and glittering, which
-made merry music when they were shaken in the hand.
-In exchange, the cacique and the chief of the Bohitos
-gave what they had, maize and the cloth of the cotton-tree.
-Presently, the white strangers touched the golden
-plates which hung from our forefathers’ ears, and asked
-by signs where the gold came from? and our forefathers
-pointed towards where Cuba and Hispaniola lay across
-the sea. At this the white strangers smiled to each
-other, and were pleased. The multitudes followed them
-whithersoever they went, and when the even was come,
-and the sun going down, the white men passed again in
-their great canoes to the floating houses with wings, in
-which they lived on the sea. Our forefathers accompanied
-them with songs and rejoicings in their small canoes, and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_416">[Pg 416]</span>
-the great white cacique, standing high above the ocean,
-waved them farewell, while the lightning flashed and the
-thunder rolled from the floating house beneath him.</p>
-
-<p>And this is the story of the first coming of white men,
-as my forefather, the cacique, who saw them, told it to my
-forefather, the next cacique, who was carried by them a
-slave to dig for gold in Hispaniola.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="r10">
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_THE_LAST">CHAPTER THE LAST.<br><br>
-<span class="fs80">I MEET OLD FRIENDS.</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p>Weeks passed slowly away. Twice a day, in the morning
-and the afternoon, I mounted to the summit of the
-highest rock in the island, looking anxiously round for
-sails, and there, by consent of the Indians, who felt
-secure in their hiding-place, I piled up a great mass of
-brushwood, ready for firing as a signal, in case of any
-English vessel approaching. During these long solitary
-watches I thought much of my life since I had been
-carried a prisoner to the West Indies. I thought how
-many great dangers I had undergone, how many narrow
-escapes I had made, and I began gradually to entertain
-the idea whether, upon an opportunity offering, I had
-better resume a buccaneering life, or set out across the
-Atlantic for home. I said to myself, ‘I will not return
-penniless as when I went forth.’ The pearls left to me by
-poor Rumbold were, as he said, worth fully one thousand
-pounds, and I doubted not but that my share in the
-booty captured in the Carthagena galleon, I owning one-third
-of the schooner which took her, as well as being
-second officer on board, would come to something very
-considerable. Here, then, were means upon which I
-could at once return and bring happiness and wealth to
-the firesides of Kirkleslie. I brooded over these things
-much. Lying in the shade of my brushwood pile,
-watching the buzzing sparkling insects which shot hither
-and thither in the air—the dragon-fly poising his lithe<span class="pagenum" id="Page_417">[Pg 417]</span>
-body, and the brightly painted butterflies flitting from
-flower to flower, I pondered and turned the question in
-my mind. My old habits of castle-building came back
-upon me, and I erected two splendid edifices upon the
-foundation of the subtle air.</p>
-
-<p>The first was of my lot if I remained in the West
-Indies, or joined the bold adventurers who were pushing
-across the isthmus of Darien, to launch upon a career of
-fortune in the South Sea. I pictured myself the commander
-of a stout ship of war, nay, the admiral of a fleet
-of stout ships of war, carrying fire and sword into
-Panama, Payta, or Acapulco, capturing Spanish galleons
-by the squadron, and dictating terms to the captive
-governors of overthrown cities. Then, as I lay thinking,
-and watching the gorgeous proportions of this air-painted
-dream, it faded away, and another and a humbler vision
-rose; it represented the green fields and white beaches
-of the fair coast of Fife—the straggling cottages of Kirkleslie—the
-pier of whinstone, stretching forth seawards—the
-little rippling bay, where the Burn of Balwearie
-poured its frothing waters into the brine—the green
-bourocks of bent and waving grass, which surrounded it,
-marked with their brown patches of dry herring nets,
-and the rocking boats, riding to their grapnels in the bay.
-Then I saw approaching the shore a stout brig, lofty in
-her rig and graceful in her form, and I saw the fishers,
-and their wives, and their bairns, all running down to the
-beach, and shouting, with joyful clamour, that here was
-come Leonard Lindsay’s new brig, the Royal Thistle,
-fresh from the stocks at Leith.</p>
-
-<p>And there was another consideration too. It is sad to
-remember it now, but it was joyful to dream of it then.
-I had a long tryste at Alicant, and I thought how proud
-I would be, in my own stout ship, to carry my betrothed
-from her Spanish city to the northern home which she
-had chosen and which she would love.</p>
-
-<p>If both of these plans were, in the ending, empty and
-vain, at least one was built on a less airy foundation than
-the other. I determined not to grasp at overmuch. I<span class="pagenum" id="Page_418">[Pg 418]</span>
-decided not to let go the substance for the shadow, and
-at length I started up from the grass, and with a heart
-light as that of a boy let loose from school, I shouted,
-‘Home, home! the rough winds and the rugged coasts of
-Scotland before all these teeming lands and summer
-seas!’</p>
-
-<p>Having once formed this resolution, I was miserable
-until I had the means of putting it in execution. From
-the grey dawn to the grey eve I sat upon my watch-tower
-on the hill; sometimes the Indians accompanied
-me, and we talked touching the only subject on which
-they cared to converse—the past glories of Guanhani,
-and the future happiness of Coyaba. Sometimes I was
-alone, tossing restlessly upon the turf in my impatience,
-wondering whether all vessels had ceased to sail the sea,
-since I saw none,—plucking out my flint and steel every
-quarter of an hour, to take care that all was ready for
-firing the beacon at a moment’s notice; or noting any
-change in the slant of the tradewind, which might cause
-a vessel to diverge from her course between the islands
-and the main. Several times I attempted to patch up
-the broken boat of the ‘Saucy Susan,’ which lay upon a
-sheltered bit of beach, with the tide flowing in and out of
-her, but she was injured beyond my powers as a ship
-carpenter to repair, and besides, had she been afloat and
-sound, I had nothing of which I could make a sail. The
-Indians possessed a canoe, but only fit for paddling.</p>
-
-<p>During these tedious weeks, I strained my memory in
-vain to make out whether I had ever heard of such an
-island as that on which I stood. In most of the maps of
-the Caribbean Sea, small specks of nameless isles are laid
-down in great profusion all round Cape Gracias à Dios,
-but I knew that these charts were, for the most part, to
-be little depended upon, except as regarded the great
-islands and headlands; and I remembered the labyrinth
-of rocks, islets, and reefs, in which we found the dwarf
-pilot, and which were not even indicated in any one chart
-we had on board the ‘Will-o’-the-Wisp.’ The Indians
-said, that the time of ships coming hither was very<span class="pagenum" id="Page_419">[Pg 419]</span>
-uncertain; sometimes two or three passed by in a moon,
-sometimes two or three moons passed by during which
-the sea would be sailless; now a passing ship would keep
-far off, so that her canvas would show not bigger than the
-wing of a sea-fowl; anon she would anchor in the lee of
-the island, and lie there for days, filling her water-casks
-from the rain ponds in the hollows of the rocks, and
-allowing the men to scamper at large, hunting pigeons
-and noddies, or searching for turtles’ eggs, all over the
-island.</p>
-
-<p>But at length my happy moment arrived—the long-looked
-for came at last. I ought to have mentioned, that
-the island upon the windward-side was indented by a
-large bay, which stretched from one extremity of the land
-to the other. In the centre of this bay, and near the
-beach, were various rocky islets and sand-banks, amongst
-which on arriving I had been driven, and upon each horn
-of the crescent, long points of high and rugged rock
-jutted forth into the sea, making that appear a deep bay
-which was in reality a mere shallow coast indentation.
-My signal-post, as I called it, was near the centre of the
-bay, and about a mile from each of the jutting and rocky
-horns which I have mentioned; the hut of the Indians
-being among the clefts and bushes beneath.</p>
-
-<p>I was wakened early one morning by the howl of the
-wind through the trees and precipices above us, and,
-presently going forth, found it blowing a hard gale right
-into the bay—the rocky islets before the beach being only
-now and then to be seen like black specks amid the foam.
-The gale increased as the day advanced, and about noon,
-a tremendous breaker swept so high up the beach as to
-catch the wreck of the ‘Saucy Susan’s’ boat, and fairly
-to drive it to pieces on the shingle. The day was very
-dark and dismal, the clouds flying fast and low, and the
-sea-birds making, in flocks, for the cover of the land.
-The horizon from my look-out was only a few miles in
-extent, but within it, the seas broke furiously, and the
-surf upon either horn of the bay was grand to look at.
-In the afternoon, I wandered forth alone upon the beach—the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_420">[Pg 420]</span>
-Indians, who did not relish such weather, keeping
-snug at home—and remained for hours in a sheltered
-nook upon the southern ridge of the bay, watching the
-great seas rolling in and assaulting the rocks.</p>
-
-<p>The day was wearing away, and the sun was setting
-behind the island, when I suddenly heard a shout to seaward.
-Starting up to my feet, I saw about a cable’s
-length distant from the bluff, on the outside of the bay,
-and a little to windward, a small sloop, showing but a
-rag of sail, and struggling hard to weather the point.
-The bark, though very small, was decked from stem to
-stern. Had it not been for that, she would not have
-lived a moment in such a sea. As it was, she bent over,
-so that I could see three men lying upon the slanting
-planks, holding on to the weather-rigging, while the
-steersman, made fast on the weather side to a staunchion
-of the light rail, which run round the sloop, worked the
-tiller by means of blocks and tackling. It was an even
-chance, so far as I could see, whether the sloop would
-beat round into the bay, or be shivered upon the headland,
-and I rushed as far out as I could upon the rocks
-to watch the catastrophe. On she came, plunging and
-tearing over the seas, hove up aloft, so that she was
-sometimes almost on a level with the ground I stood on,
-then ducking into the trough, so that I could only see the
-top of her tiny mainsail, with the spray of the next coming
-sea, torn up by the wind, and pelting over and over
-it. The figures on board held on to the weather-bulwarks,
-like grim death; but as she closed nearer and nearer with
-the rocks, I saw two of them kick off their shoes, and
-strip their doublets. A moment would now decide their
-fate. The sloop was not half-a-score fathoms from the
-outermost point, over which the sea boiled white. She
-sank heavily into a deep foaming trough of sea, and her
-sail flapped in the lull. Up again, as though cast by a
-sling! She leaped at the next surge—a blast which
-made me stagger back on the rocks—almost tearing the
-mast out of her, and lifting her, as it were, bodily over
-the furiously ridging and tumbling water. The wave<span class="pagenum" id="Page_421">[Pg 421]</span>
-burst in milk-white foam beneath, the spray flying round
-and over me, but from the very centre, as it appeared, of
-the seething hissing mass of the rebuffed and broken
-billow, the gallant little bark flew triumphantly round
-the rock, and into the bay.</p>
-
-<p>‘Hurrah,’ I shouted; ‘bravely done!’</p>
-
-<p>The men on board caught my words, even through the
-roar of the surf. He who was steering, and who had
-been hitherto crouching down, watching the run of the
-seas, looked up. Could I believe my eyes? Nicky
-Hamstring!</p>
-
-<p>‘Lindsay! Will Thistle! Hurrah!’ he shouted.</p>
-
-<p>‘Comrade—old comrade!’ I cried, making a speaking-trumpet
-of my hands. ‘Beach her—run her right
-through the surf. High and dry—high and dry!’</p>
-
-<p>The sloop was already beyond hearing, but Nicky
-waved his hand. Up goes the helm, round fly the bows
-of the bark towards the open white beach of the bay, and
-shorewards she shoots, leaping from sea to sea!</p>
-
-<p>Leaping indeed from sea to sea, but not faster than I
-sprung from rock to rock, and bank to bank, striving to
-be upon the beach before her. It was a grand race. I
-saw Nicky’s crew leap up, as the sloop, now upon an
-even keel, went scudding like a feather before a hurricane.
-More sail—more sail! They are shaking out two reefs
-in the canvas! They will drive her through the breakers
-in style! Away goes the widened sheet higher and
-higher up the mast! See how it swells, and tugs, and
-surges, as though it would pluck the craft out of the
-water by the very roots, and drag and soar with her
-through the air! I am running fast, but she heads me.
-See, Nicky is standing in the stern, and again he waves
-his hand! Is it in token of hope, or of farewell? A
-minute will end all. The sloop flies madly into the line
-of breakers! A sea comes white over and over her!
-No! she is not down; up she staggers on the crest of
-the following wave, pouring the water from her
-sides, and her crew still clinging steadfastly round the
-mast. On she goes—a dusky spot—a mere tossing<span class="pagenum" id="Page_422">[Pg 422]</span>
-morsel amid the wallowing surf, but the brave mast
-still holds on, the stout canvas still bears her
-onward, like a bird! There, down into the trough once
-more, and now aloft again on the very shoulder of a
-breaking sea, which has hove her up, as a strong man
-swings a child, and then bearing her recklessly on, dissolves
-beneath her keel, in a tumbling avalanche of
-creaming foam, in the centre of which the sloop is carried
-triumphantly up, upon the wreaths of sea-weed at the
-very top of high water-mark, and there, as the sea recedes,
-is left high and dry! No Deal boatmen ever
-beached a galley more admirably after a wild trip to the
-Goodwin Sands.</p>
-
-<p>The next moment I had both Nicky Hamstring’s hands
-in mine! Such a meeting! It was as if he had fallen
-from the moon upon me! And what a world of inquiries
-to put to each other. How had I come there? How
-had he come there? For five minutes it was nothing but
-such rapid question and answer! Then quoth I, ‘And
-Stout Jem, and the “Will-o’-the-Wisp?”’</p>
-
-<p>‘They cannot be five miles to windward,’ replied
-Nicky, ‘and running the same course as we when we saw
-breakers ahead, and beat round into the bay. The sloop
-is a Spanish craft we wanted to carry to Jamaica, and we
-were in company with the schooner all day, until she split
-her foresail; after which we got the start, and lost sight
-of her.’</p>
-
-<p>By this time it was getting dark, the gale still blowing
-furiously.</p>
-
-<p>‘We none of us had the slightest idea of land within a
-hundred miles,’ said Nicky. ‘I would to God that we
-had the means of giving Stout Jem notice of what he is
-running on, while he has still a mile or two of offing.’</p>
-
-<p>I immediately remembered my beacon of piled brushwood,
-and thanked heaven that I had collected it. But
-as we were all scampering up the hill towards it, we met
-the two old Indians coming down to the beach. From a
-snug place of espial they had seen the meeting between
-Nicky Hamstring and myself, and rightly conjecturing<span class="pagenum" id="Page_423">[Pg 423]</span>
-that they had nothing to fear from one who seemed so
-much my friend, they had come forth to offer a refuge to
-the wrecked mariners. Accordingly, leaving them to
-conduct two of the sailors whom I did not know, to the
-cave, the third being no other than my old shipmate,
-Lanscriffe, who shook hands with me heartily, he and
-Nicky and I were speedily standing beside my beacon.
-It was now quite dark, and seawards we could descry
-nought beyond the dull white belt of breakers. A light
-was speedily struck, and in a minute after it was applied;
-the brushwood being as dry as tinder, a bright blaze, torn
-and driven by the wind, rose flickering up into the dark
-night, casting long rays of light over the waving grass and
-bushes, and the white and tumbling sea. I had made the
-pile of brushwood so large, that the beacon was nothing
-but a great bonfire, and presently the two seamen we had
-left rejoined us with the Indians, carrying between them
-a small tar barrel which they had made shift to get at out
-of the stranded bark, the tide having now ebbed considerably
-back from it. This was a grand addition to our
-beacon, and, fed by the fat pitchy unguent, the blaze
-must have been seen leagues away. That it was seen by
-those for whom we lit it we soon had a satisfactory token,
-in the quickly following flashes of several guns, fired by a
-vessel near a league off at sea. Upon this we descended
-to the beach again. The Will-o’-the-Wisp, for Nicky
-Hamstring did not doubt but it was she, presently ran up
-lanterns to her main and topmast heads, and, in a few
-moments more, she burned a flaring blue light, which
-showed the beautiful schooner weltering through the seas
-close hauled under closely reefed fore and mainsails, but,
-as we all hoped and believed, holding her own very
-steadily.</p>
-
-<p>As we sat watching her upon the beach, Nicky Hamstring
-recounted to me the particulars of the attack upon
-Carthagena harbour after I had been made prisoner, and
-the subsequent capture of the galleon. My share of the
-booty was, it seems, lodged in the hands of Mr. Pratt, at
-Jamaica, and would be at once made over to me. To<span class="pagenum" id="Page_424">[Pg 424]</span>
-narrate all the particulars of the cruise of the Will-o’-the-Wisp
-after I quitted her, would be no part of my
-story, and I dismiss it by simply stating, that so many
-and so great were the prizes which she took, that not a
-man who sailed under Stout Jem but was, according to
-his degree, enriched, and returned to Jamaica with
-money, and plenty of it, in both pockets.</p>
-
-<p>Talking in this manner, the first part of the night wore
-away, and, as it waxed late, the gale began to lull. You
-may be sure in all our converse we never took our eyes
-from the schooner’s lights, which rose and sank regularly
-upon the seas. But we were soon relieved of our anxiety
-regarding her, by observing that she rather clawed away
-from the shore than approached it, and we knew well that
-not an eye would be closed aboard the schooner that
-eventful night. About midnight the heavy clouds to
-windward began to break, and the schooner burnt another
-blue light, by which we saw that she had a reef out of her
-sails, and was standing on and off snugly enough, the sea
-going down very fast.</p>
-
-<p>Thereupon we all retired to the cave, the Indians doing
-the honours of their abode with such simple grace, that
-Nicky called them two brown old gentlemen without
-clothes, and swore that he would run the risk of being
-wrecked again to be so kindly tended. It was indeed a
-happy meal! Lanscriffe and his comrades had gone down
-to the stranded ship, and returned laden with good cheer,
-and every few minutes, as we ate, and drank, and
-laughed, one of us would start up and run out to see how
-the schooner fared, and come back with the news that the
-wind was going down more and more, and that our friends
-were all safe, a league from the rocks, and riding as
-snugly as though the schooner were lying in a millpond.</p>
-
-<p>‘And all the old faces are still on board?’ quoth I.</p>
-
-<p>‘Every one of them,’ answered Nicky; ‘all our old
-party of the Marmousettes in Hispaniola, from Stout
-Jem down to Blue Peter, and, indeed, almost every man
-we shipped in Jamaica, including Mr. Bell, who hath become<span class="pagenum" id="Page_425">[Pg 425]</span>
-such a reformed character, that it seems as if that
-keel-hauling, which you remember, has had the most
-beneficial effect in washing the roguery out of him.’</p>
-
-<p>‘And the negro,’ says I; ‘the Spanish negro, we captured
-fishing for pisareros off Carthagena?’</p>
-
-<p>‘Oh! he was sent ashore with the sailors of the
-galleon, who, I hear, landed at Porto Bello.’</p>
-
-<p>‘There was,’ says I, ‘on board that galleon, one old
-man, a merchant—’</p>
-
-<p>‘He who told Stout Jem that you had escaped from
-the Spaniards at Carthagena—a grave and reverend old
-man,’ said Nicky. ‘He bore his loss so tranquilly, that
-I thought, and others thought it too, that he went over
-the side of the galleon into the boat with some of the
-most precious parts of his goods concealed upon, his
-person. A sly old fox, to be sure.’</p>
-
-<p>To tell the truth, I was not sorry to hear this.</p>
-
-<p>‘We got enough from him as it was, Nicky,’ I said.</p>
-
-<p>‘Humph!’ quoth Nicky, ‘I must say we did.’</p>
-
-<p>The grey dawn found the schooner anchored in the
-bay, and before sunrise Nicky and I, having obtained the
-canoe of the Indians for the purpose, leaped on board.</p>
-
-<p>I almost shook Captain Jem out of his hammock, into
-which, poor man, he had only just turned, after seeing
-that all was safe with the ground tackle, and that the
-weather looked settled.</p>
-
-<p>‘Captain Jem! Captain Jem!’ I cried; ‘you told
-the merchant on board the galleon, that you loved me as
-a son, and here is your son come back again to you!’</p>
-
-<p>I will not try to reduce to words the shout of delight
-with which the hearty old fellow jumped clean out of his
-hammock, and clutching my hands in both of his, danced
-me round and round the little cabin. It was a thorough
-welcome home, and almost induced me to falter in my
-resolution of immediately returning to Scotland. But
-the feeling lasted but for a moment. I loved my comrades,
-but I loved kith and kin more, and now I had that
-to carry back to them which would bring grateful tears
-to many an eye.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_426">[Pg 426]</span></p>
-
-<p>And now my story is told.</p>
-
-<p>I have bidden a solemn farewell to the representatives
-of the blood of the old caciques, and the ‘Will-o’-the-Wisp’
-is under weigh, bound direct for Jamaica, from whence I
-can easily procure a passage home. Her buccaneering
-cruise, of which I saw so little, is ended. She lies deep
-in the water, freighted with the spoils of the proud
-Spaniards, who vainly swore that theirs alone would be
-the empire and the treasure of the New World. Her
-merry crew will shortly be dispersed, and never rock in
-hammocks in one ship again. Stout Jem is bound for
-Europe, and mayhap we will go together. Nicky Hamstring,
-true to his opinion, that the New World is a
-merrier one than the Old, talks of enlisting under the
-banner of Captain Morgan, to march with him across the
-mountains to the great South Sea. Each has his plans,
-and every man’s plan is different from his neighbour’s.
-May they all prosper!</p>
-
-<p>And now I bid my readers a kind good by!</p>
-
-<p>I have told them roughly, but truly, as much of my
-life as was the ‘Story of a Buccaneer.’ If they have
-found it stirring enough to while away a leisure hour, I
-am content. But if from it they have learned something
-of the real truth concerning Buccaneers, how the order
-sprung naturally from the greed of the Spaniards to make
-a monopoly of America—how the Buccaneers lived by
-sea and land—how they hunted, and sailed, and made
-war—how there were good and bad, honest hearts and
-rogues among them—in short, if they have learned what
-manner of men the Buccaneers were, and what manner
-of lives they led—then I shall be more than content; I
-shall think that I have served the memories of my brave
-countrymen who sleep beneath those western seas, and
-that I have given to the world some information, not
-without its uses, touching an interesting chapter of our
-maritime history.</p>
-
-
-<p class="center fs80">THE END.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-<p class="center fs60">Woodfall &amp; Kinder, Printers, Milford Lane, Strand, London, W.C.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<div class="chapter"></div>
-<div class="transnote">
-
-<h2><span class="fs130">Transcriber’s Notes</span></h2>
-<ul>
-<li>pg iii Added comma after: OF MY BOYHOOD, AND HOW</li>
-<li>pg iv Added missing page number 89</li>
-<li>pg 6 Changed gallantly. At night-fall to: nightfall</li>
-<li>pg 7 Changed leeward fore-topsail yardarm to: yard-arm</li>
-<li>pg 14 Changed would not render up a marevedi to: maravedi</li>
-<li>pg 16 Changed After which the quarter-master to: quartermaster</li>
-<li>pg 38 Added period after: hate Jack Spaniard</li>
-<li>pg 39 Changed spelling of: in the expedition in which l’Olonais to: l’Olonnais</li>
-<li>pg 43 Changed For the Sea, the mosquito men to: Mosquito</li>
-<li>pg 76 Changed ‘“Ay, nevvy,” quoth the old captain, to: Nevvy</li>
-<li>pg 90 Changed therefore of quite sufficent to: sufficient</li>
-<li>pg 101 Changed which lay close a-beam to: abeam</li>
-<li>pg 104 Changed I had the midwatch to: mid-watch</li>
-<li>pg 109 Changed I hope, never bear to: hear</li>
-<li>pg 137 Changed Will-o’-the Whisp to: Will-o’-the-Wisp</li>
-<li>pg 142 Changed “Breakers on the weather bow to: ‘Breakers</li>
-<li>pg 142 Changed all clear with the anchor.” to: anchor.’</li>
-<li>pg 142 Changed “Down with your helm to: ‘Down</li>
-<li>pg 143 Changed great labyrinth of sandbanks to: sand-banks</li>
-<li>pg 149 Changed “So you landed here to: ‘So</li>
-<li>pg 149 Changed “Call you that seamen’s to: ‘Call</li>
-<li>pg 152 Changed schooner if you don’t wan’t to: want</li>
-<li>pg 152 Changed have been allowed on board.” to: board.’</li>
-<li>pg 156 Changed schooner in the morning.” to: morning.’</li>
-<li>pg 162 Changed “Where is the dwarf?’ to: ‘Where is the dwarf?’</li>
-<li>pg 167 Changed sprit of the main-sail to mainsail</li>
-<li>pg 167 Changed dollars, reals, and marvedis to: maravedis</li>
-<li>pg 168 Changed And we echood to: echoed</li>
-<li>pg 168 Changed screamed joyously over-head to: overhead</li>
-<li>pg 168 Changed glances of the hot sun-light to: sunlight</li>
-<li>pg 169 Changed wavy bunches of slimy seaweed to: sea-weed</li>
-<li>pg 171 Changed mass of slushy seaweed to: sea-weed</li>
-<li>pg 172 Changed him very nervously, fidgetting to: fidgeting</li>
-<li>pg 176 Changed Meantine the sky was growing to: Meantime</li>
-<li>pg 177 Added letter e after: dwarf as we heard this. H</li>
-<li>pg 191 Changed chapter heading DICE IS KEELHAULED to: KEEL-HAULED</li>
-<li>pg 193 Changed towards the stern, which heightenng to: heightening</li>
-<li>pg 208 Added period after: and there was silence</li>
-<li>pg 212 Changed while below was a great beauffet to: buffet</li>
-<li>pg 214 Added quote after: sign that the waters are abated.</li>
-<li>pg 218 Changed trust we may say our vepsers to: vespers</li>
-<li>pg 225 Changed Tomorrow I was to appear to: To-morrow</li>
-<li>pg 225 Changed out a squadron of their armadillos. to: armadilloes</li>
-<li>pg 229 Changed at the rate of a brass marvedi to: maravedi</li>
-<li>pg 232 Changed in the harbour of Cathagena to: Carthagena</li>
-<li>pg 232 Changed rescue single-handed, griped to: gripped</li>
-<li>pg 233 Removed repeated word from: pirate shall die the the</li>
-<li>pg 236 Removed repeated word from: and which shall shall now be rehearsed</li>
-<li>pg 242 Changed pretended to be, in some agitatation to: agitation</li>
-<li>pg 244 Changed which I eagerly asisted to: assisted</li>
-<li>pg 251 Changed track to tell of who has cleft to: left</li>
-<li>pg 257 Added missing word in: I have landed from a vessel the bay</li>
-<li>pg 263 Added missing chapter title: THE FAMILY OF THE SPANISH MERCHANT.</li>
-<li>pg 265 Changed devil incarnate, whom they call Mountbars to: Montbars</li>
-<li>pg 266 Changed ‘Ay, verily,” to: ‘Ay, verily,’</li>
-<li>pg 267 Changed he answered that tomorrow to: to-morrow</li>
-<li>pg 268 Changed arching of her dark eye-brows to: eyebrows</li>
-<li>pg 272 Changed I will marry only you.” to: you.’</li>
-<li>pg 275 Changed “Eavesdropper!’ to: ‘Eavesdropper!’</li>
-<li>pg 277 Added quote after: everywhere for Joseffa, but——</li>
-<li>pg 280 Changed Spaniard would keep all to himseif to: himself</li>
-<li>pg 280 Changed these adventurers oft-times to: ofttimes</li>
-<li>pg 317 Changed from sun-down to sun-rise to: sundown to sunrise</li>
-<li>pg 325 Removed repeated word from: even the the most skilful</li>
-<li>pg 329 Changed Disco himself, a Musquito Indian to: Mosquito</li>
-<li>pg 332 Added period after: firing pistols in the air</li>
-<li>pg 334 Changed The Mosquitto man merely shrugged to: Mosquito</li>
-<li>pg 341 Changed thickened speech and blood-shot to: bloodshot</li>
-<li>pg 343 Changed short run down by the Mosquitto coast to: Mosquito</li>
-<li>pg 346 Changed rules of privateers-men to: privateersmen</li>
-<li>pg 348 Changed pitiful hound of a Portugee to: Portuguese</li>
-<li>pg 349 Changed from the mizenmast to: mizen-mast</li>
-<li>pg 349 Changed teach a cowardly Portugee to: Portuguese</li>
-<li>pg 350 Changed and his ancles to: ankles</li>
-<li>pg 361 Changed Tonquil entered it unbidden. to: Torquil</li>
-<li>pg 362 Changed single quote to double after: and bidding, shall overwhelm him.</li>
-<li>pg 362 Changed “Look you, Torquil Randa,’ to: ‘Look you, Torquil Randa,’</li>
-<li>pg 362 Changed “whoso in this galley to: ‘whoso in this galley</li>
-<li>pg 372 Changed was that villainous Portuguee to: Portuguese</li>
-<li>pg 381 Changed avoid all pirates, flebustiers to: flibustiers</li>
-<li>pg 383 Changed and whom they called ‘Captain to: “Captain</li>
-<li>pg 388 Added quote before: Well, captain, you know</li>
-<li>pg 388 Added quote after: Oxford Road shall cry,</li>
-<li>pg 391 Changed taken under stout L’Olonnais to: l’Olonnais</li>
-<li>pg 392 Changed ‘Here be what I like,’ voicferated to: vociferated</li>
-<li>pg 392 Changed shirks overboard after the Portuguee to: Portuguese</li>
-<li>pg 397 Changed ‘Amen! am en!’ to: amen</li>
-<li>pg 399 Changed Dios, the great head-land to: headland</li>
-<li>pg 406 Added quote after: near me a broken boat.</li>
-<li>pg 422 Changed Spanish craft we wanted to carry to Jamaics to: Jamaica</li>
-<li>pg 424 Added hyphen to: cruise of the Will-o’-the Wisp</li>
-<li>pg 426 Added quote after the letter o in: and the ‘Will-o-the-Wisp’</li>
-</ul>
-
-</div>
-
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