<p><SPAN name="Page_132" id="Page_132"></SPAN></p>
<h2 class="chapter"><SPAN name="Chapter_XVI" id="Chapter_XVI"></SPAN>Chapter XVI</h2>
<h2>A Pirate Potentate</h2>
<p>Sometime in the last half of the seventeenth
century on a quiet farm in a secluded part of
Wales there was born a little boy baby.
His father was a farmer, and his mother churned,
and tended the cows and the chickens, and there
was no reason to imagine that this gentle little baby,
born and reared in this rural solitude, would become
one of the most formidable pirates that the world
ever knew. Yet such was the case.</p>
<p>The baby's name was Henry Morgan, and as he
grew to be a big boy a distaste for farming grew
with him. So strong was his dislike that when he
became a young man he ran away to the seacoast,
for he had a fancy to be a sailor. There he found
a ship bound for the West Indies, and in this he
started out on his life's career. He had no money to
pay his passage, and he therefore followed the usual
custom of those days and sold himself for a term of
three years to an agent who was taking out a number
of men to work on the plantations. In the places
<SPAN name="Page_133" id="Page_133"></SPAN>
where these men were enlisted they were termed
servants, but when they got to the new world they
were generally called slaves and treated as such.</p>
<p>When young Morgan reached the Barbadoes he
was resold to a planter, and during his term of service
he probably worked a good deal harder and
was treated much more roughly than any of the
laborers on his father's farm. But as soon as he
was a free man he went to Jamaica, and there were
few places in the world where a young man could
be more free and more independent than in this lawless
island.</p>
<p>Here were rollicking and blustering "flibustiers,"
and here the young man determined to study piracy.
He was not a sailor and hunter who by the force
of circumstances gradually became a buccaneer, but
he deliberately selected his profession, and immediately
set to work to acquire a knowledge of its
practice. There was a buccaneer ship about to sail
from Jamaica, and on this Morgan enlisted. He
was a clever fellow and very soon showed himself to
be a brave and able sailor.</p>
<p>After three or four voyages he acquired a reputation
for remarkable coolness in emergencies, and
showed an ability to take advantage of favorable
circumstances, which was not possessed by many of
his comrades. These prominent traits in his character
became the foundation of his success. He
<SPAN name="Page_134" id="Page_134"></SPAN>
also proved himself a very good business man, and
having saved a considerable amount of money he
joined with some other buccaneers and bought a
ship, of which he took command. This ship soon
made itself a scourge in the Spanish seas; no other
buccaneering vessel was so widely known and so
greatly feared, and the English people in these
regions were as proud of the young Captain Morgan
as if he had been a regularly commissioned
admiral, cruising against an acknowledged enemy.</p>
<p>Returning from one of his voyages Morgan found
an old buccaneer, named Mansvelt, in Jamaica, who
had gathered together a fleet of vessels with which
he was about to sail for the mainland. This expedition
seemed a promising one to Morgan, and he
joined it, being elected vice-admiral of the fleet of
fifteen vessels. Since the successes of L'Olonnois
and others, attacks upon towns had become very
popular with the buccaneers, whose leaders were
getting to be tired of the retail branch of their business;
that is, sailing about in one ship and capturing
such merchantmen as it might fall in with.</p>
<p>Mansvelt's expedition took with it not only six
hundred fighting pirates, but one writing pirate, for
John Esquemeling accompanied it, and so far as the
fame and reputation of these adventurers was concerned
his pen was mightier than their swords, for
had it not been for his account of their deeds very
<SPAN name="Page_135" id="Page_135"></SPAN>
little about them would have been known to the
world.</p>
<p>The fleet sailed directly for St. Catherine, an
island near Costa Rica, which was strongly fortified
by the Spaniards and used by them as a station for
ammunition and supplies, and also as a prison.
The pirates landed upon the island and made a
most furious assault upon the fortifications, and
although they were built of stone and well furnished
with cannon, the savage assailants met with their
usual good fortune. They swarmed over the walls
and carried the place at the edge of the cutlass and
the mouth of the pistol. In this fierce fight Morgan
performed such feats of valor that even some
of the Spaniards who had been taken prisoners,
were forced to praise his extraordinary courage and
ability as a leader.</p>
<p>The buccaneers proceeded to make very good
use of their victory. They captured some small
adjoining islands and brought the cannon from
them to the main fortress, which they put in a good
condition of defence. Here they confined all their
prisoners and slaves, and supplied the island with
an abundance of stores and provisions.</p>
<p>It is believed that when Mansvelt formed the
plan of capturing this island he did so with the idea
of founding there a permanent pirate principality,
the inhabitants of which should not consider themselves
<SPAN name="Page_136" id="Page_136"></SPAN>
English, French, or Dutch, but plain pirates,
having a nationality and country of their own. Had
the seed thus planted by Mansvelt and Morgan
grown and matured, it is not unlikely that the whole
of the West Indies might now be owned and inhabited
by an independent nation, whose founders were
the bold buccaneers.</p>
<p>When everything had been made tight and right
at St. Catherine, Mansvelt and Morgan sailed for
the mainland, for the purpose of attacking an inland
town called Nata, but in this expedition they were
not successful. The Spanish Governor of the province
had heard of their approach, and met them with
a body of soldiers so large that they prudently gave
up the attempt,—a proceeding not very common
with them, but Morgan was not only a dare-devil
of a pirate, but a very shrewd Welshman.</p>
<p>They returned to the ships, and after touching
at St. Catherine and leaving there enough men to
defend it, under the command of a Frenchman
named Le Sieur Simon, they sailed for Jamaica.
Everything at St. Catherine was arranged for permanent
occupation; there was plenty of fresh water,
and the ground could be cultivated, and Simon was
promised that additional forces should be sent him
so that he could hold the island as a regular station
for the assembling and fitting out of pirate vessels.</p>
<p>The permanent pirate colony never came to anything;
<SPAN name="Page_137" id="Page_137"></SPAN>
no reënforcements were sent; Mansvelt
died, and the Spaniards gathered together a sufficient
force to retake the island of St. Catherine, and make
prisoners of Simon and his men. This was a blow
to Morgan, who had had great hopes of the fortified
station he thought he had so firmly established, but
after the project failed he set about forming another
expedition.</p>
<p>He was now recognized as buccaneer-in-chief
of the West Indies, and he very soon gathered
together twelve ships and seven hundred men.
Everything was made ready to sail, and the only
thing left to be done was to decide what particular
place they should favor with a visit.</p>
<p>There were some who advised an attack upon
Havana, giving as a reason that in that city there
were a great many nuns, monks, and priests, and
if they could capture them, they might ask as ransom
for them, a sum a great deal larger than they
could expect to get from the pillage of an ordinary
town. But Havana was considered to be too strong
a place for a profitable venture, and after several
suggestions had been made, at last a deserter from
the Spanish army, who had joined them, came forward
with a good idea. He told the pirates of a
town in Cuba, to which he knew the way; it was
named Port-au-Prince, and was situated so far inland
that it had never been sacked. When the pirates
<SPAN name="Page_138" id="Page_138"></SPAN>
heard that there existed an entirely fresh and unpillaged
town, they were filled with as much excited
delight as if they had been a party of school-boys
who had just been told where they might find a
tree full of ripe apples which had been overlooked
by the men who had been gathering the crop.</p>
<p>When Morgan's fleet arrived at the nearest harbor
to Port-au-Prince, he landed his men and
marched toward the town, but he did not succeed in
making a secret attack, as he had hoped. One of
his prisoners, a Spaniard, let himself drop overboard
as soon as the vessels cast anchor, and swimming
ashore, hurried to Port-au-Prince and informed the
Governor of the attack which was about to be made
on the town. Thus prepared, this able commander
knew just what to do. He marched a body of
soldiers along the road by which the pirates must
come, and when he found a suitable spot he caused
great trees to be cut down and laid across the road,
thus making a formidable barricade. Behind this
his soldiers were posted with their muskets and
their cannon, and when the pirates should arrive
they would find that they would have to do some
extraordinary fighting before they could pass this
well-defended barrier.</p>
<p>When Morgan came within sight of this barricade,
he understood that the Spaniards had discovered
his approach, and so he called a halt. He
<SPAN name="Page_139" id="Page_139"></SPAN>
had always been opposed to unnecessary work, and
he considered that it would be entirely unnecessary
to attempt to disturb this admirable defence, so
he left the road, marched his men into the woods,
led them entirely around the barricades, and then,
after proceeding a considerable distance, emerged
upon a wide plain which lay before the town. Here
he found that he would have to fight his way into
the city, and, probably much to his surprise, his
men were presently charged by a body of cavalry.</p>
<p>Pirates, as a rule, have nothing to do with
horses, either in peace or war, and the Governor of
the town no doubt thought that when his well-armed
horsemen charged upon these men, accustomed
to fighting on the decks of ships, and totally
unused to cavalry combats, he would soon scatter
and disperse them. But pirates are peculiar fighters;
if they had been attacked from above by means
of balloons, or from below by mines and explosives,
they would doubtless have adapted their style of
defence to the method of attack. They always did
this, and according to Esquemeling they nearly
always got the better of their enemies; but we must
remember that in cases where they did not succeed,
as happened when they marched against the town of
Nata, he says very little about the affair and amplifies
only the accounts of their successes.</p>
<p>But the pirates routed the horsemen, and, after
<SPAN name="Page_140" id="Page_140"></SPAN>
a fight of about four hours, they routed all the
other Spaniards who resisted them, and took possession
of the town. Here they captured a great
many prisoners which they shut up in the churches
and then sent detachments out into the country to
look for those who had run away. Then these
utterly debased and cruel men began their usual
course after capturing a town; they pillaged, feasted,
and rioted; they gave no thought to the needs of
the prisoners whom they had shut up in the
churches, many of whom starved to death; they
tortured the poor people to make them tell where
they had hid their treasures, and nothing was too
vile or too wicked for them to do if they thought
they could profit by it. They had come for the express
purpose of taking everything that the people
possessed, and until they had forced from them all
that was of the slightest value, they were not satisfied.
Even when the poor citizens seemed to have
given up everything they owned they were informed
that if they did not pay two heavy ransoms, one to
protect themselves from being carried away into
slavery, and one to keep their town from being
burned, the same punishments would be inflicted
upon them.</p>
<p>For two weeks the pirates waited for the unfortunate
citizens to go out into the country and find
some of their townsmen who had escaped with a
<SPAN name="Page_141" id="Page_141"></SPAN>
portion of their treasure. In those days people
did not keep their wealth in banks as they do now,
but every man was the custodian of most of his own
possessions, and when they fled from the visitation
of an enemy they took with them everything of
value that they could carry. If their fortunes had
been deposited in banks, it would doubtless have
been more convenient for the pirates.</p>
<p>Before the citizens returned Morgan made a discovery:
a negro was captured who carried letters
from the Governor of Santiago, a neighboring city,
to some of the citizens of Port-au-Prince, telling
them not to be in too great a hurry to pay the ransom
demanded by the pirates, because he was coming
with a strong force to their assistance. When
Morgan read these letters, he changed his mind, and
thought it would be a wise thing not to stay in that
region any longer than could be helped. So he
decided not to wait for the unfortunate citizens to
collect the heavy ransom he demanded, but told
them that if they would furnish him with five hundred
head of cattle, and also supply salt and help
prepare the meat for shipment, he would make no
further demands upon them. This, of course, the
citizens were glad enough to do, and when the buccaneers
had carried to the ships everything they had
stolen, and when the beef had been put on board,
they sailed away.</p>
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<p>Morgan directed the course of the fleet to a small
island on which he wished to land in order that
they might take an account of stock and divide
the profits. This the pirates always did as soon
as possible after they had concluded one of their
nefarious enterprises. But his men were not at all
satisfied with what happened on the island. Morgan
estimated the total value of the booty to be
about fifty thousand dollars, and when this comparatively
small sum was divided, many of the men
complained that it would not give them enough to
pay their debts in Jamaica. They were utterly
astonished that after having sacked an entirely
fresh town they should have so little, and there
is no doubt that many of them believed that their
leader was a man who carried on the business of
piracy for the purpose of enriching himself, while
he gave his followers barely enough to keep them
quiet.</p>
<p>There was, however, another cause of discontent
among a large body of the men; it appears that the
men were very fond of marrow-bones, and while
they were yet at Port-au-Prince and the prisoners
were salting the meat which was to go on the ships,
the buccaneers went about among them and took
the marrow-bones which they cooked and ate while
they were fresh. One of the men, a Frenchman,
had selected a very fine bone, and had put it by
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his side while he was preparing some other tidbits,
when an Englishman came along, picked up the
bone, and carried it away.</p>
<p>Now even in the chronicles of Mother Goose we
are told of the intimate connection between Welshmen,
thievery, and marrow-bones; for</p>
<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
<span class="i4">"Taffy was a Welshman,<br/></span>
<span class="i6">Taffy was a thief,<br/></span>
<span class="i4">Taffy came to my house<br/></span>
<span class="i6">And stole a leg of beef.<br/></span></div>
<div class="stanza">
<span class="i4">"I went to Taffy's house,<br/></span>
<span class="i6">Taffy wasn't home,<br/></span>
<span class="i4">Taffy went to my house,<br/></span>
<span class="i6">And stole a marrow-bone."<br/></span></div>
</div>
<p>What happened to Taffy we do not know, but
Morgan was a Welshman, Morgan was a thief, and
one of his men had stolen a marrow-bone; therefore
came trouble. The Frenchman challenged the
Englishman; but the latter, being a mean scoundrel,
took advantage of his opponent, unfairly stabbed
him in the back and killed him.</p>
<p>Now all the Frenchmen in the company rose in
furious protest, and Morgan, wishing to pacify them,
had the English assassin put in chains, and promised
that he would take him to Jamaica and deliver
him to justice. But the Frenchmen declined to be
satisfied; they had received but very little money
<SPAN name="Page_144" id="Page_144"></SPAN>
after they had pillaged a rich town, and they believed
that their English companions were inclined
to take advantage of them in every way, and consequently
the greater part of them banded together
and deliberately deserted Morgan, who was obliged
to go back to Jamaica with not more than half his
regular forces, doubtless wishing that the cattle on
the island of Cuba had been able to get along without
marrow-bones.</p>
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