<p><SPAN name="Page_159" id="Page_159"></SPAN></p>
<h2 class="chapter"><SPAN name="Chapter_XIX" id="Chapter_XIX"></SPAN>Chapter XIX</h2>
<h2>A Tight Place for Morgan</h2>
<p>At this important crisis again turned up the
man with an idea. This was an inventive
buccaneer, who proposed to Morgan that
they should take a medium-sized ship which they
had captured at the other end of the lake, and
make a fire-ship of her. In order that the Spaniards
might not suspect the character of this incendiary
craft, he proposed that they should fit her up
like one of the pirate war-vessels, for in this case
the Spaniards would not try to get away from her,
but would be glad to have her come near enough
for them to capture her.</p>
<p>Morgan was pleased with this plan, and the fire-ship
was prepared with all haste. All the pitch,
tar, and brimstone in the town were put on board
of her, together with other combustibles. On the
deck were placed logs of wood, which were dressed
up in coats and hats to look like men, and by their
sides were muskets and cutlasses. Portholes were
made, and in these were placed other logs to represent<SPAN name="Page_160" id="Page_160"></SPAN>
cannon. Thus this merchant vessel, now as
inflammable as a pine knot, was made to resemble
a somewhat formidable pirate ship. The rest of
the fleet was made ready, the valuables and prisoners
and slaves were put on board; and they all
sailed boldly down toward the Spanish vessels, the
fire-ship in front.</p>
<p>When the Spanish admiral saw this insignificant
fleet approaching, he made ready to sink it to the
bottom, and when the leading vessel made its way
directly toward his own ship, as if with the impudent
intention of boarding her, he did not fire at her,
but let her come on. The few pirates on board the
fire-ship ran her up against the side of the great
man-of-war; and after making her fast and applying
their matches, they immediately slipped overboard,
and swam to one of their own vessels before the
Spaniards had an idea of what had happened. The
fire-ship was soon ablaze, and as the flames quickly
spread, the large vessel took fire, and the people on
board had scarcely time to get out of her before she
sank.</p>
<p>The commander of one of the other ships was so
much frightened by what had occurred in so short
a space of time that he ran his vessel aground and
wrecked her, her men jumping out into the water
and making for the land. As for the other ship,
the pirates boldly attacked her and captured her,
<SPAN name="Page_161" id="Page_161"></SPAN>
and as she was a very fine vessel, Morgan left his
own small vessel, in which he had been commanding
his fleet, and took possession of her. Thus, in
a very short time, the whole state of affairs was
changed. The Spaniards had no ships at all, and
Morgan was in command of a very fine vessel, in
which he led his triumphant fleet.</p>
<p>Victory is a grand thing to a pirate as it is to
every human being who has been engaged in a conflict,
but none of the joys of triumph could equal
the sordid rapacity of Morgan and his men. They
spent days in trying to recover the money and plate
which were on board the sunken Spanish ships.
The sterns of these projected above water, and a
great deal of valuable treasure was recovered from
them. The pirates worked very hard at this,
although they had not the slightest idea how they
were to pass the castle and get away with the
plunder after they had obtained it.</p>
<p>When the wrecks had been stripped of everything
of value, the time came for demanding a ransom for
not burning the town and hanging the prisoners,
and as the poor citizens knew very well what they
might expect, they sent word to the admiral, who
had escaped to the castle, begging him to accede to
the demands of Morgan, and to let the wretched
pirates go. But the admiral, Don Alonso, was a
thoroughbred Spaniard, and he would listen to no
<SPAN name="Page_162" id="Page_162"></SPAN>
such cowardly suggestion. He would consent to
no ransom being paid, and on no account would he
allow the pirates to pass the channel. The citizens,
however, who knew what was good for them, raised
the money, and paid the ransom in coin and cattle,
and Morgan declared that if the admiral would not
let him out of the lake, he would have to attend to
that matter himself.</p>
<p>But before he made another bold stroke against
the enemy his stingy and niggardly spirit urged
him to defend himself against his friends, and before
endeavoring to leave he ordered a division of
the spoils. Many of the goods taken from the two
towns were on board the different vessels of the
fleet, and he was very much afraid that if his comrades,
who commanded the other ships, should be
so fortunate as to get out to sea, they would sail
away with the booty they carried, and he would not
see any of it. Therefore, the booty from every
ship was brought on board his own fine vessel, and
every man was put through an examination as rigid
as if he had been passing a custom house, and was
obliged to prove that he had not concealed or kept
back any money or jewels. The value of the plunder
was very great, and when it had been divided,
according to the scale which Morgan had adopted,
the pirate leader felt safe. He now had his
share of the prizes in his own possession, and
<SPAN name="Page_163" id="Page_163"></SPAN>
that to him was more important than anything else
in the world.</p>
<p>The question of getting away was a very serious
one; the greater part of his fleet consisted of small
vessels which could not defy the guns of the fort,
and as the stout hearts and brawny arms of his followers
could be of no use to him in this dilemma,
Morgan was obliged to fall back upon his own
brains; therefore, he planned a trick.</p>
<p>When everything had been prepared for departure,
Morgan anchored his fleet at a distance from
the castle, but not so far away that the Spaniards
could not observe his movements. Then he loaded
some boats with armed men and had them rowed
ashore on the side of the channel on which the
castle stood. The boats landed behind a little
wood, and there the men, instead of getting out,
crouched themselves down in the bottom of the
boats so that they should not be seen. Then
the boats, apparently empty, were rowed back to
the pirate ships, and in a short time, again full of
men sitting, upright, with their muskets and cutlasses,
they went to the shore, and soon afterwards
returned apparently empty as before.</p>
<p>This performance was repeated over and over
again, until the people in the castle were convinced
that Morgan was putting his men on shore in order
to make a land attack upon the rear of the castle
<SPAN name="Page_164" id="Page_164"></SPAN>
during the night. But the Spanish admiral was
not to be caught by any such clumsy stratagem as
that, and, therefore, in great haste he had his big
cannon moved to the land side of the fort, and
posted there the greater part of his garrison in
order that when the pirates made their assault in
the dead of the night they would meet with a reception
for which they had not bargained.</p>
<p>When it was dark, and the tide began to run
out, the pirate vessels weighed anchor, and they
all drifted down toward the castle. Morgan's spies
had perceived some of the extraordinary movements
in the Spanish fortifications, and he therefore drifted
down with a good deal of confidence, although, had
his trick been discovered in time it would have gone
very hard with his fleet. It is probable that he had
taken all these chances into consideration and had
felt pretty sure that if the cannon of the fort had
been opened upon them it would not have been the
big ship which carried him and his precious load
which would have been sunk by the great guns, and
that no matter what happened to the smaller vessels
and the men on board them, he and his own ship
would be able to sail away.</p>
<p>But the Spaniards did not perceive the approach
of the drifting fleet, for they were intrepidly waiting
at the back of the castle to make it very hot for the
pirates when they should arrive. Slowly past the
<SPAN name="Page_165" id="Page_165"></SPAN>
great walls of the fort drifted the fleet of buccaneers,
and then, at a signal, every vessel hoisted its sails,
and, with a good wind, sailed rapidly toward the
open sea. The last pirate vessel had scarcely passed
the fort when the Spaniards discovered what was
going on, and in great haste they rolled their cannon
back to the water side of the fort and began
firing furiously, but it was of no use.</p>
<p>The pirates sailed on until they were out of danger,
and then they anchored and arranged for putting
on shore the greater number of their prisoners, who
were only an encumbrance to them. As a parting
insult, Morgan fired seven or eight of his largest
guns at the castle, whose humiliated occupants did
not reply by a single shot.</p>
<p>In order to understand what thoroughly contemptible
scoundrels these pirates were it may be
stated that when Morgan and his men reached
Jamaica after a good deal of storm and trouble on
the way, they found there many of their comrades
who had not been able to join them at their rendezvous
at Savona. These unfortunate fellows, who
had not known where Morgan had gone and were
unable to join him, had endeavored to do some piratical
business of their own, but had had very little
luck and a great many misfortunes. Morgan's men,
with their pockets full of money, jeered and sneered
at their poor comrades who had had such hard times,
<SPAN name="Page_166" id="Page_166"></SPAN>
and without any thought of sharing with them the
least portion of their own vile gains they treated
them with contempt and derision.</p>
<p>The buccaneer, Captain Henry Morgan, was
now a very great personage, but with his next expedition,
which was a very important one, and in
its extent resembled warfare rather than piracy, we
shall have little to do because his exploits in this
case were not performed on our Atlantic coasts, but
over the Isthmus, on the shores of the Pacific.</p>
<p>Morgan raised a great fleet, carrying a little army
of two thousand men, and with this he made his
way to the other side of the Isthmus and attacked
the city of Panama, which, of course, he captured.
His terrible deeds at this place resembled those
which he performed after the capture of the smaller
towns which we have been considering, except that
they were on a scale of greater magnitude. Nearly
the whole of the town of Panama was burned, and
the excesses, cruelties, and pillages of the conquerors
were something almost without parallel.</p>
<p>Before marching overland to Panama, Morgan
had recaptured the island of St. Catherine, which
was a very valuable station for his purposes, and
had also taken the castle of Chagres on the mainland
near by, and on his return from the conquest and
pillage of the unfortunate city he and his forces
gathered together at Chagres in order to divide the
spoils.</p>
<p><SPAN name="Page_167" id="Page_167"></SPAN></p>
<p>Now came great trouble and dissatisfaction;
many of the buccaneers loudly declared that Morgan
was taking everything that was really valuable for his
own, especially the precious stones and jewels, and
that they were getting a very small share of the
booty of Panama. There seemed to be good reason
for these complaints, for the sum of about two hundred
dollars apiece was all that Morgan's men received
after their terrible hardships and dangers and
the pillage of a very rich town. The murmurings
and complaints against Morgan's peculiar methods
became louder and more frequent, and at last the
wily Welshman began to be afraid that serious
trouble would come to him if he did not take care
of himself. This, however, he was very capable of
doing. Silently and quietly one night, without
giving notice to any of the buccaneers at Chagres,
except a few who were in his secret, Morgan, in his
large ship, sailed away for Jamaica, followed by
only a few other vessels, containing some of his
favored companions.</p>
<p>When the great body of the buccaneers, the principal
portion of which were Frenchmen, found that
their leader had deserted them, there was a grand
commotion, and if they had been able, the furious
men who had had this trick played upon them,
would have followed Morgan to treat him as they
had so often treated the Spaniards. But they could
<SPAN name="Page_168" id="Page_168"></SPAN>
not follow—Morgan had taken great care that this
should not happen. Their ships were out of order;
they had been left very short of provisions and ammunition,
and found that not only were they unable
to avenge themselves on their traitor leader, but
that it would be very hard for them to get away at all.</p>
<p>Poor Esquemeling, the literary pirate, was one of
those who was left behind, and in his doleful state
he made the following reflection, which we quote
from his book: "Captain Morgan left us all in such
a miserable condition as might serve for a lively
representation of what rewards attend wickedness at
the latter end of life. Whence we ought to have
learned how to regulate and amend our actions for
the future."</p>
<p>After Morgan had safely reached Jamaica with
all his booty, the idea renewed itself in his mind of
returning to St. Catherine, fortifying the place and
putting it in complete order, and then occupying it
as a station for all pirates, with himself the supreme
governor and king of the buccaneers. But before
he had completed his arrangements for doing this
there was a change in the affairs at Jamaica: the
king of England, having listened to the complaints
of the Spanish crown, had recalled the former
Governor and put him on trial to answer for
the manner in which he allowed the island to be
used by the pirates for their wicked purposes against
<SPAN name="Page_169" id="Page_169"></SPAN>
a friendly nation, and had sent a new Governor
with orders to allow no buccaneers in Jamaica, and
in every way to suppress piracy in those parts.</p>
<p>Now the shrewd Morgan saw that his present
business was likely to become a very undesirable
one, and he accordingly determined to give it up.
Having brutally pillaged and most cruelly treated
the Spaniards as long as he was able to do so, and
having cheated and defrauded his friends and companions
to the utmost extent possible, he made up
his mind to reform, and a more thoroughly base
and contemptible reformed scoundrel was never
seen on the face of the earth.</p>
<p>Morgan was now a rich man, and he lost no time
in becoming very respectable. He endeavored to
win favor with the new Governor, and was so successful
that when that official was obliged to return
to England on account of his health, he left the
ex-pirate in charge of the affairs of the island in
the capacity of Deputy-Governor. More than this,
King Charles, who apparently had heard of Morgan's
great bravery and ability, and had not cared
to listen to anything else about him, knighted him,
and this preëminent and inhuman water-thief became
Sir Henry Morgan.</p>
<p>In his new official capacity Morgan was very
severe upon his former associates, and when any of
them were captured and brought before him, he
<SPAN name="Page_170" id="Page_170"></SPAN>
condemned some to be imprisoned and some to be
hung, and in every way apparently endeavored to
break up the unlawful business of buccaneering.</p>
<p>About this time John Esquemeling betook himself
to Europe with all possible despatch, for he had
work to do and things to tell with which the Deputy-Governor
would have no sympathy whatever. He
got away safely, and he wrote his book, and if he
had not had this good fortune, the world would have
lost a great part of the story of what happened to
the soft little baby who was born among the quiet
green fields of Wales.</p>
<p>Even during the time that he was Deputy-Governor,
Morgan was suspected of sharing in the gains
of some buccaneers at the same time that he punished
others, and after the death of Charles II. he
was sent to England and imprisoned, but what
eventually became of him we do not know. If he
succeeded in ill-using and defrauding his Satanic
Majesty, there is no record of the fact.</p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />