<p><SPAN name="Page_65" id="Page_65"></SPAN></p>
<h2 class="chapter"><SPAN name="Chapter_IX" id="Chapter_IX"></SPAN>Chapter IX</h2>
<h2>A Pirate Author</h2>
<p>In the days which we are considering there were
all sorts of pirates, some of whom gained much
reputation in one way and some in another, but
there was one of them who had a disposition different
from that of any of his fellows. He was a regular
pirate, but it is not likely that he ever did much fighting,
for, as he took great pride in the brave deeds
of the Brethren of the Coast, he would have been
sure to tell us of his own if he had ever performed
any. He was a mild-mannered man, and, although
he was a pirate, he eventually laid aside the pistol,
the musket, and the cutlass, and took up the pen,—a
very uncommon weapon for a buccaneer.</p>
<p>This man was John Esquemeling, supposed by
some to be a Dutchman, and by others a native of
France. He sailed to the West Indies in the year
1666, in the service of the French West India
Company. He went out as a peaceable merchant
clerk, and had no more idea of becoming a pirate
<SPAN name="Page_66" id="Page_66"></SPAN>
than he had of going into literature, although he
finally did both.</p>
<p>At that time the French West India Company
had a colonial establishment on the island of Tortuga,
which was principally inhabited, as we have
seen before, by buccaneers in all their various grades
and stages, from beef-driers to pirates. The French
authorities undertook to supply these erratic people
with the goods and provisions which they needed,
and built storehouses with everything necessary for
carrying on the trade. There were plenty of purchasers,
for the buccaneers were willing to buy
everything which could be brought from Europe.
They were fond of good wine, good groceries, good
firearms, and ammunition, fine cutlasses, and very
often good clothes, in which they could disport
themselves when on shore. But they had peculiar
customs and manners, and although they were
willing to buy as much as the French traders had
to sell, they could not be prevailed upon to pay
their bills. A pirate is not the sort of a man who
generally cares to pay his bills. When he gets
goods in any way, he wants them charged to him,
and if that charge includes the features of robbery and
murder, he will probably make no objection. But
as for paying good money for what is received, that
is quite another thing.</p>
<p>That this was the state of feeling on the island
<SPAN name="Page_67" id="Page_67"></SPAN>
of Tortuga was discovered before very long by the
French mercantile agents, who then applied to the
mother country for assistance in collecting the debts
due them, and a body of men, who might be called
collectors, or deputy sheriffs, was sent out to the
island; but although these officers were armed with
pistols and swords, as well as with authority, they
could do nothing with the buccaneers, and after a
time the work of endeavoring to collect debts from
pirates was given up. And as there was no profit
in carrying on business in this way, the mercantile
agency was also given up, and its officers were
ordered to sell out everything they had on hand,
and come home. There was, therefore, a sale, for
which cash payments were demanded, and there
was a great bargain day on the island of Tortuga.
Everything was disposed of,—the stock of merchandise
on hand, the tables, the desks, the stationery,
the bookkeepers, the clerks, and the errand
boys. The living items of the stock on hand were
considered to be property just as if they had been
any kind of merchandise, and were sold as slaves.</p>
<p>Now poor John Esquemeling found himself in
a sad condition. He was bought by one of the
French officials who had been left on the island,
and he described his new master as a veritable
fiend. He was worked hard, half fed, treated cruelly
in many ways, and to add to his misery, his
<SPAN name="Page_68" id="Page_68"></SPAN>
master tantalized him by offering to set him free
upon the payment of a sum of money equal to
about three hundred dollars. He might as well
have been asked to pay three thousand or three
million dollars, for he had not a penny in the
world.</p>
<p>At last he was so fortunate as to fall sick, and
his master, as avaricious as he was cruel, fearing
that this creature he owned might die, and thus be
an entire loss to him, sold him to a surgeon, very
much as one would sell a sick horse to a veterinary
surgeon, on the principle that he might make something
out of the animal by curing him.</p>
<p>His new master treated Esquemeling very well,
and after he had taken medicine and food enough
to set him upon his legs, and had worked for the
surgeon about a year, that kind master offered him
his liberty if he would promise, as soon as he could
earn the money, to pay him one hundred dollars,
which would be a profit to his owner, who had paid
but seventy dollars for him. This offer, of course,
Esquemeling accepted with delight, and having
made the bargain, he stepped forth upon the warm
sands of the island of Tortuga a free and happy
man. But he was as poor as a church mouse.
He had nothing in the world but the clothes on his
back, and he saw no way in which he could make
money enough to keep himself alive until he had
<SPAN name="Page_69" id="Page_69"></SPAN>
paid for himself. He tried various ways of support,
but there was no opening for a young business man
in that section of the country, and at last he came
to the conclusion that there was only one way by
which he could accomplish his object, and he therefore
determined to enter into "the wicked order of
pirates or robbers at sea."</p>
<p>It must have been a strange thing for a man
accustomed to pens and ink, to yard-sticks and
scales, to feel obliged to enroll himself into a company
of bloody, big-bearded pirates, but a man must
eat, and buccaneering was the only profession open
to our ex-clerk. For some reason or other, certainly
not on account of his bravery and daring, Esquemeling
was very well received by the pirates of Tortuga.
Perhaps they liked him because he was a mild-mannered
man and so different from themselves.
Nobody was afraid of him, every one felt superior to
him, and we are all very apt to like people to whom
we feel superior.</p>
<p>As for Esquemeling himself, he soon came to
entertain the highest opinion of his pirate companions.
He looked upon the buccaneers who had
distinguished themselves as great heroes, and it
must have been extremely gratifying to those savage
fellows to tell Esquemeling all the wonderful things
they had done. In the whole of the West Indies
there was no one who was in the habit of giving
<SPAN name="Page_70" id="Page_70"></SPAN>
such intelligent attention to the accounts of piratical
depredations and savage sea-fights, as was Esquemeling
and if he had demanded a salary as a listener
there is no doubt that it would have been paid to
him.</p>
<p>It was not long before his intense admiration of
the buccaneers and their performances began to produce
in him the feeling that the history of these
great exploits should not be lost to the world, and
so he set about writing the lives and adventures
of many of the buccaneers with whom he became
acquainted.</p>
<p>He remained with the pirates for several years,
and during that time worked very industriously getting
material together for his history. When he
returned to his own country in 1672, having done
as much literary work as was possible among the
uncivilized surroundings of Tortuga, he there completed
a book, which he called, "The Buccaneers of
America, or The True Account of the Most Remarkable
Assaults Committed of Late Years Upon
the Coasts of the West Indies by the Buccaneers,
etc., by John Esquemeling, One of the Buccaneers,
Who Was Present at Those Tragedies."</p>
<p>From this title it is probable that our literary
pirate accompanied his comrades on their various
voyages and assaults, in the capacity of reporter,
and although he states he was present at many of
<SPAN name="Page_71" id="Page_71"></SPAN>
"those tragedies," he makes no reference to any
deeds of valor or cruelty performed by himself,
which shows him to have been a wonderfully conscientious
historian. There are persons, however,
who doubt his impartiality, because, as he liked the
French, he always gave the pirates of that nationality
the credit for most of the bravery displayed on their
expeditions, and all of the magnanimity and courtesy,
if there happened to be any, while the surliness,
brutality, and extraordinary wickednesses were
all ascribed to the English. But be this as it may,
Esquemeling's history was a great success. It was
written in Dutch and was afterwards translated into
English, French, and Spanish. It contained a great
deal of information regarding buccaneering in general,
and most of the stories of pirates which we
have already told, and many of the surprising narrations
which are to come, have been taken from the
book of this buccaneer historian.</p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />