<p><SPAN name="Page_171" id="Page_171"></SPAN></p>
<h2 class="chapter"><SPAN name="Chapter_XX" id="Chapter_XX"></SPAN>Chapter XX</h2>
<h2>The Story of a High-Minded Pirate</h2>
<p>After having considered the extraordinary
performances of so many of those execrable
wretches, the buccaneers, it is refreshing
and satisfactory to find that there were exceptions
even to the rules which governed the conduct and
general make-up of the ordinary pirate of the period,
and we are therefore glad enough to tell the story of
a man, who, although he was an out-and-out buccaneer,
possessed some peculiar characteristics which
give him a place of his own in the history of piracy.</p>
<p>In the early part of these sketches we have alluded
to a gentleman of France, who, having become
deeply involved in debt, could see no way of putting
himself in a condition to pay his creditors but to go
into business of some kind. He had no mercantile
education, he had not learned any profession, and it
was therefore necessary for him to do something for
which a previous preparation was not absolutely
essential.</p>
<p>After having carefully considered all the methods
<SPAN name="Page_172" id="Page_172"></SPAN>
of making money which were open to him under the
circumstances, he finally concluded to take up piracy
and literature. Even at the present day it is considered
by many persons that one of these branches
of industry is a field of action especially adapted to
those who have not had the opportunity of giving
the time and study necessary in any other method
of making a living.</p>
<p>The French gentleman whose adventures we are
about to relate was a very different man from John
Esquemeling, who was a literary pirate and nothing
more. Being of a clerkly disposition, the gentle
John did not pretend to use the sabre or the pistol.
His part in life was simply to watch his companions
fight, burn, and steal, while his only weapon was his
pen, with which he set down their exploits and
thereby murdered their reputations.</p>
<p>But Monsieur Raveneau de Lussan was both
buccaneer and author, and when he had finished his
piratical career he wrote a book in which he gave a
full account of it, thus showing that although he had
not been brought up to a business life, he had very
good ideas about money-making.</p>
<p>More than that, he had very good ideas about
his own reputation, and instead of leaving his exploits
and adventures to be written up by other people,—that
is, if any one should think it worth while to do
so,—he took that business into his own hands.<SPAN name="Page_173" id="Page_173"></SPAN>
He was well educated, he had been brought up in good
society, and as he desired to return to that society
it was natural for him to wish to paint his own portrait
as a buccaneer. Pictures of that kind as they
were ordinarily executed were not at all agreeable to
the eyes of the cultivated classes of France, and so
M. de Lussan determined to give his personal attention
not only to his business speculations, but to
his reputation. He went out as a buccaneer in
order to rob the Spaniards of treasure with which to
pay his honest debts, and, in order to prevent his
piratical career being described in the coarse and disagreeable
fashion in which people generally wrote
about pirates, he determined to write his own adventures.</p>
<p>If a man wishes to appear well before the world,
it is often a very good thing for him to write his
autobiography, especially if there is anything a little
shady in his career, and it may be that de Lussan's
reputation as a high-minded pirate depends somewhat
on the book he wrote after he had put down
the sword and taken up the pen; but if he gave a
more pleasing color to his proceedings than they
really deserved, we ought to be glad of it. For,
even if de Lussan the buccaneer was in some degree
a creature of the imagination of de Lussan the author,
we have a story which is much more pleasing and,
in some respects, more romantic than stories of
<SPAN name="Page_174" id="Page_174"></SPAN>
ordinary pirates could possibly be made unless the
writer of such stories abandoned fact altogether and
plunged blindly into fiction.</p>
<p>Among the good qualities of de Lussan was a
pious disposition. He had always been a religious
person, and, being a Catholic, he had a high regard
and veneration for religious buildings, for priests,
and for the services of the church, and when he had
crossed the Atlantic in his ship, the crew of which
was composed of desperadoes of various nations,
and when he had landed upon the western continent,
he wished still to conform to the religious
manners and customs of the old world.</p>
<p>Having a strong force under his command and
possessing, in common with most of the gentlemen
of that period, a good military education, it
was not long after he landed on the mainland before
he captured a small town. The resistance which
he met was soon overcome, and our high-minded
pirate found himself in the position of a conqueror
with a community at his mercy. As his piety now
raised itself above all his other attributes, the first
thing that he did was to repair to the principal
church of the town, accompanied by all his men,
and here, in accordance with his commands, a Te
Deum was sung and services were conducted by the
priests in charge. Then, after having properly performed
his religious duties, de Lussan sent his men
<SPAN name="Page_175" id="Page_175"></SPAN>
through the town with orders to rob the inhabitants
of everything valuable they possessed.</p>
<p>The ransacking and pillaging of the houses continued
for some time, but when the last of his men
had returned with the booty they had collected,
the high-minded chief was dissatisfied. The town
appeared to be a good deal poorer than he had
expected, and as the collection seemed to be so very
small, de Lussan concluded that in some way or
other he must pass around the hat again. While
he was wondering how he should do this he happened
to hear that on a sugar plantation not very
far away from the town there were some ladies of
rank who, having heard of the approach of the
pirates, had taken refuge there, thinking that even
if the town should be captured, their savage enemies
would not wander into the country to look for
spoils and victims.</p>
<p>But these ladies were greatly mistaken. When
de Lussan heard where they were, he sent out a
body of men to make them prisoners and bring
them back to him. They might not have any
money or jewels in their possession, but as they
belonged to good families who were probably
wealthy, a good deal of money could be made out
of them by holding them and demanding a heavy
ransom for their release. So the ladies were all
brought to town and shut up securely until their
<SPAN name="Page_176" id="Page_176"></SPAN>
friends and relatives managed to raise enough money
to pay their ransom and set them free, and then, I
have no doubt, de Lussan advised them to go to
church and offer up thanks for their happy deliverance.</p>
<p>As our high-minded pirate pursued his plundering
way along the coast of South America, he met
with a good many things which jarred upon his sensitive
nature—things he had not expected when he
started out on his new career. One of his disappointments
was occasioned by the manners and customs
of the English buccaneers under his command.
These were very different from the Frenchmen of
his company, for they made not the slightest pretence
to piety.</p>
<p>When they had captured a town or a village, the
Englishmen would go to the churches, tear down
the paintings, chop the ornaments from the altars
with their cutlasses, and steal the silver crucifixes,
the candlesticks, and even the communion services.
Such conduct gave great pain to de Lussan. To
rob and destroy the property of churches was in his
eyes a great sin, and he never suffered anything of
the kind if he could prevent it. When he found in
any place which he captured a wealthy religious
community or a richly furnished church, he scrupulously
refrained from taking anything or of doing
damage to property, and contented himself with
<SPAN name="Page_177" id="Page_177"></SPAN>
demanding heavy indemnity, which the priests were
obliged to pay as a return for the pious exemption
which he granted them.</p>
<p>But it was very difficult to control the Englishmen.
They would rob and destroy a church as
willingly as if it were the home of a peaceful family,
and although their conscientious commander did
everything he could to prevent their excesses, he
did not always succeed. If he had known what
was likely to happen, his party would have consisted
entirely of Frenchmen.</p>
<p>Another thing which disappointed and annoyed
the gentlemanly de Lussan was the estimation in
which the buccaneers were held by the ladies of the
country through which he was passing. He soon
found that the women in the Spanish settlements
had the most horrible ideas regarding the members
of the famous "Brotherhood of the Coast." To
be sure, all the Spanish settlers, and a great part of
the natives of the country, were filled with horror
and dismay whenever they heard that a company
of buccaneers was within a hundred miles of their
homes, and it is not surprising that this was the
case, for the stories of the atrocities and cruelties
of these desperadoes had spread over the western
world.</p>
<p>But the women of the settlements looked upon
the buccaneers with greater fear and abhorrence than
<SPAN name="Page_178" id="Page_178"></SPAN>
the men could possibly feel, for the belief was almost
universal among them that buccaneers were terrible
monsters of cannibal habits who delighted in devouring
human beings, especially if they happened to
be young and tender. This ignorance of the true
character of the invaders of the country was greatly
deplored by de Lussan. He had a most profound
pity for those simple-minded persons who had allowed
themselves to be so deceived in regard to the
real character of himself and his men, and whenever
he had an opportunity, he endeavored to persuade
the ladies who fell in his way that sooner
than eat a woman he would entirely abstain from
food.</p>
<p>On one occasion, when politely conducting a
young lady to a place of confinement, where in
company with other women of good family she was
to be shut up until their relatives could pay handsome
ransoms for their release, he was very much
surprised when she suddenly turned to him with
tears in her eyes, and besought him not to devour
her. This astonishing speech so wounded the feelings
of the gallant Frenchman that for a moment
he could not reply, and when he asked her what
had put such an unreasonable fear in her mind,
she could only answer that she thought he looked
hungry, and that perhaps he would not be willing to
wait until—And there she stopped, for she could
<SPAN name="Page_179" id="Page_179"></SPAN>
not bring her mind to say—until she was properly
prepared for the table.</p>
<p>"What!" exclaimed the high-minded pirate.
"Do you suppose that I would eat you in the
street?" And as the poor girl, who was now crying,
would make him no answer, he fell into a
sombre silence which continued until they had
reached their destination.</p>
<p>The cruel aspersions which were cast upon his
character by the women of the country were very
galling to the chivalrous soul of this gentleman of
France, and in every way possible he endeavored to
show the Spanish ladies that their opinions of him
were entirely incorrect, and even if his men were
rather a hard lot of fellows, they were not cannibals.</p>
<p>The high-minded pirate had now two principal
objects before him. One was to lay his hand upon
all the treasure he could find, and the other was to
show the people of the country, especially the ladies,
that he was a gentleman of agreeable manners and
a pious turn of mind.</p>
<p>It is highly probable that for some time the hero
of this story did not succeed in his first object as
well as he would have liked. A great deal of treasure
was secured, but some of it consisted of property
which could not be easily turned into cash
or carried away, and he had with him a body of
rapacious and conscienceless scoundrels who were
<SPAN name="Page_180" id="Page_180"></SPAN>
continually clamoring for as large a share of the
available spoils—such as jewels, money, and small
articles of value—as they could induce their commander
to allow them, and, in consequence of this
greediness of his own men, his share of the plunder
was not always as large as it ought to be.</p>
<p>But in his other object he was very much more
successful, and, in proof of this, we have only to relate
an interesting and remarkable adventure which
befell him. He laid siege to a large town, and, as
the place was well defended by fortifications and
armed men, a severe battle took place before it was
captured. But at last the town was taken, and
de Lussan and his men having gone to church to
give thanks for their victory,—his Englishmen
being obliged to attend the services no matter what
they did afterward,—he went diligently to work to
gather from the citizens their valuable and available
possessions. In this way he was brought into personal
contact with a great many of the people of the
town, and among the acquaintances which he made
was that of a young Spanish lady of great beauty.</p>
<p>The conditions and circumstances in the midst of
which this lady found herself after the city had been
taken, were very peculiar. She had been the wife
of one of the principal citizens, the treasurer of the
town, who was possessed of a large fortune, and who
lived in one of the best houses in the place; but
<SPAN name="Page_181" id="Page_181"></SPAN>
during the battle with the buccaneers, her husband,
who fought bravely in defence of the place, was
killed, and she now found herself not only a widow,
but a prisoner in the hands of those ruthless pirates
whose very name had struck terror into the hearts
of the Spanish settlers. Plunged into misery and
despair, it was impossible for her to foresee what was
going to happen to her.</p>
<p>As has been said, the religious services in the
church were immediately followed by the pillage of
the town; every house was visited, and the trembling
inhabitants were obliged to deliver up their
treasures to the savage fellows who tramped through
their halls and rooms, swearing savagely when they
did not find as much as they expected, and laughing
with wild glee at any unusual discovery of jewels or
coin.</p>
<p>The buccaneer officers as well as the men assisted
in gathering in the spoils of the town, and it so
happened that M. Raveneau de Lussan, with his
good clothes and his jaunty hat with a feather in it,
selected the house of the late treasurer of the city
as a suitable place for him to make his investigations.
He found there a great many valuable
articles and also found the beautiful young widow.</p>
<p>The effect produced upon the mind of the lady
when the captain of the buccaneers entered her
house was a very surprising one. Instead of beholding
<SPAN name="Page_182" id="Page_182"></SPAN>
a savage, brutal ruffian, with ragged clothes
and gleaming teeth, she saw a handsome gentleman,
as well dressed as circumstances would permit, very
polite in his manners, and with as great a desire to
transact his business without giving her any more
inconvenience than was necessary, as if he had been
a tax-collector or had come to examine the gas
meter. If all the buccaneers were such agreeable
men as this one, she and her friends had been laboring
under a great mistake.</p>
<p>De Lussan did not complete his examination of
the treasurer's house in one visit, and during the
next two or three days the young widow not only
became acquainted with the character of buccaneers
in general, but she learned to know this particular
buccaneer very well, and to find out what an entirely
different man he was from the savage fellows who
composed his company. She was grateful to him
for his kind manner of appropriating her possessions,
she was greatly interested in his society,—for
he was a man of culture and information,—and in
less than three days she found herself very much in
love with him. There was not a man in the whole
town who, in her opinion, could compare with this
gallant commander of buccaneers.</p>
<p>It was not very long before de Lussan became
conscious of the favor he had found in the eyes of
this lady; for as a buccaneer could not be expected to
<SPAN name="Page_183" id="Page_183"></SPAN>
remain very long in one place, it was necessary, if this
lady wished the captor of her money and treasure
to know that he had also captured her heart, that she
must not be slow in letting him know the state of
her affections, and being a young person of a very
practical mind she promptly informed de Lussan
that she loved him and desired him to marry her.</p>
<p>The gallant Frenchman was very much amazed
when this proposition was made to him, which was
in the highest degree complimentary. It was very
attractive to him—but he could not understand
it. The lady's husband had been dead but a few
days—he had assisted in having the unfortunate
gentleman properly buried—and it seemed to him
very unnatural that the young widow should be in
such an extraordinary hurry to prepare a marriage
feast before the funeral baked meats had been
cleared from the table.</p>
<p>There was but one way in which he could explain
to himself this remarkable transition from grief to
a new affection. He believed that the people of
this country were like their fruits and their flowers.
The oranges might fall from the trees, but the
blossoms would still be there. Husband and wives
or lovers might die, but in the tropical hearts of
these people it was not necessary that new affections
should be formed, for they were already there, and
needed only some one to receive them.</p>
<p><SPAN name="Page_184" id="Page_184"></SPAN></p>
<p>As he did not undertake his present expedition
for the purpose of marrying ladies, no matter how
beautiful they might be, it is quite natural that
de Lussan should not accept the proffered hand of
the young widow. But when she came to detail
her plans, he found that it would be well worth his
while to carefully consider her project.</p>
<p>The lady was by no means a thoughtless young
creature, carried away by a sudden attachment.
Before making known to de Lussan her preference
for him above all other men, she had given the
subject her most careful and earnest consideration,
and had made plans which in her opinion would
enable the buccaneer captain and herself to settle
the matter to the satisfaction of all parties.</p>
<p>When de Lussan heard the lady's scheme, he
was as much surprised by her businesslike ability
as he had been by the declaration of her affection
for him. She knew very well that he could not
marry her and take her with him. Moreover, she
did not wish to go. She had no fancy for such
wild expeditions and such savage companions. Her
plans were for peace and comfort and a happy
domestic life. In a word, she desired that the
handsome de Lussan should remain with her.</p>
<p>Of course the gentleman opened his eyes very
wide when he heard this, but she had a great deal
to say upon the subject, and she had not omitted
<SPAN name="Page_185" id="Page_185"></SPAN>
any of the details which would be necessary for the
success of her scheme.</p>
<p>The lady knew just as well as the buccaneer captain
knew that the men under his command would
not allow him to remain comfortably in that town
with his share of the plunder, while they went on
without a leader to undergo all sorts of hardships
and dangers, perhaps defeat and death. If he announced
his intention of withdrawing from the band,
his enraged companions would probably kill him.
Consequently a friendly separation between himself
and his buccaneer followers was a thing not to be
thought of, and she did not even propose it.</p>
<p>Her idea was a very different one. Just as soon
as possible, that very night, de Lussan was to slip
quietly out of the town, and make his way into the
surrounding country. She would furnish him with
a horse, and tell him the way he should take, and
he was not to stop until he had reached a secluded
spot, where she was quite sure the buccaneers would
not be able to find him, no matter how diligently
they might search. When they had entirely failed
in every effort to discover their lost captain, who
they would probably suppose had been killed by
wandering Indians,—for it was impossible that he
could have been murdered in the town without
their knowledge,—they would give him up as lost
and press on in search of further adventures.</p>
<p><SPAN name="Page_186" id="Page_186"></SPAN></p>
<p>When the buccaneers were far away, and all
danger from their return had entirely passed, then
the brave and polite Frenchman, now no longer a
buccaneer, could safely return to the town, where
the young widow would be most happy to marry
him, to lodge him in her handsome house, and to
make over to him all the large fortune and estates
which had been the property of her late husband.</p>
<p>This was a very attractive offer surely, a beautiful
woman, and a handsome fortune. But she offered
more than this. She knew that a gentleman who
had once captured and despoiled the town might
feel a little delicacy in regard to marrying and settling
there and becoming one of its citizens, and
therefore she was prepared to remove any objections
which might be occasioned by such considerate
sentiments on his part.</p>
<p>She assured him that if he would agree to her
plan, she would use her influence with the authorities,
and would obtain for him the position of city
treasurer, which her husband had formerly held.
And when he declared that such an astounding performance
must be utterly impossible, she started
out immediately, and having interviewed the Governor
of the town and other municipal officers,
secured their signature to a paper in which they
promised that if M. de Lussan would accept the
proposals which the lady had made, he would be
<SPAN name="Page_187" id="Page_187"></SPAN>
received most kindly by the officers and citizens of
the town; that the position of treasurer would be
given to him, and that all the promises of the lady
should be made good.</p>
<p>Now our high-minded pirate was thrown into a
great quandary, and although at first he had had no
notion whatever of accepting the pleasant proposition
which had been made to him by the young
widow, he began to see that there were many good
reasons why the affection, the high position, and the
unusual advantages which she had offered to him
might perhaps be the very best fortune which he
could expect in this world. In the first place, if he
should marry this charming young creature and
settle down as a respected citizen and an officer of
the town, he would be entirely freed from the necessity
of leading the life of a buccaneer, and this life
was becoming more and more repugnant to him
every day,—not only on account of the highly
disagreeable nature of his associates and their reckless
deeds, but because the country was becoming
aroused, and the resistance to his advances was
growing stronger and stronger. In the next attack
he made upon a town or village he might receive a
musket ball in his body, which would end his career
and leave his debts in France unpaid.</p>
<p>More than that, he was disappointed, as has been
said before, in regard to the financial successes he
<SPAN name="Page_188" id="Page_188"></SPAN>
had expected. At that time he saw no immediate
prospect of being able to go home with money
enough in his pocket to pay off his creditors, and
if he did not return to his native land under those
conditions, he did not wish to return there at all.
Under these circumstances it seemed to be wise and
prudent, that if he had no reason to expect to be
able to settle down honorably and peaceably in
France, to accept this opportunity to settle honorably,
peaceably, and in every way satisfactorily in
America.</p>
<p>It is easy to imagine the pitching and the tossing
in the mind of our French buccaneer. The more
he thought of the attractions of the fair widow and
of the wealth and position which had been offered
him, the more he hated all thoughts of his piratical
crew, and of the dastardly and cruel character of the
work in which they were engaged. If he could have
trusted the officers and citizens of the town, there is
not much doubt that he would have married the
widow, but those officers and citizens were Spaniards,
and he was a Frenchman. A week before the
inhabitants of the place had been prosperous, contented,
and happy. Now they had been robbed,
insulted, and in many cases ruined, and he was commander
of the body of desperadoes who had robbed
and ruined them. Was it likely that they would
forget the injuries which he had inflicted upon them
<SPAN name="Page_189" id="Page_189"></SPAN>
simply because he had married a wealthy lady of the
town and had kindly consented to accept the office
of city treasurer?</p>
<p>It was much more probable that when his men
had really left that part of the country the citizens
would forget all their promises to him and
remember only his conduct toward them, and that
even if he remained alive long enough to marry the
lady and take the position offered him, it would not
be long before she was again a widow and the office
vacant.</p>
<p>So de Lussan shut his eyes to the tempting prospects
which were spread out before him, and preferring
rather to be a live buccaneer than a dead city
treasurer, he told the beautiful widow that he could
not marry her and that he must go forth again into
the hard, unsympathetic world to fight, to burn, to
steal, and to be polite. Then, fearing that if he remained
he might find his resolution weakened, he
gathered together his men and his pillage, and sadly
went away, leaving behind him a joyful town and a
weeping widow.</p>
<p>If the affection of the young Spanish lady for the
buccaneer chief was sufficient to make her take an
interest in his subsequent career, she would probably
have been proud of him, for the ladies of those days
had a high opinion of brave men and successful
warriors. De Lussan soon proved that he was not
<SPAN name="Page_190" id="Page_190"></SPAN>
only a good fighter, but that he was also an able
general, and his operations on the western coast of
South America were more like military campaigns
than ordinary expeditions of lawless buccaneers.</p>
<p>He attacked and captured the city of Panama,
always an attractive prize to the buccaneer forces,
and after that he marched down the western coast
of South America, conquering and sacking many
towns. As he now carried on his business in a
somewhat wholesale way, it could not fail to bring
him in a handsome profit, and in the course of
time he felt that he was able to retire from the
active practice of his profession and to return to
France.</p>
<p>But as he was going back into the circles of
respectability, he wished to do so as a respectable
man. He discarded his hat and plume, he threw
away his great cutlass and his heavy pistols, and
attired in the costume of a gentleman in society he
prepared himself to enter again upon his old life.
He made the acquaintance of some of the French
colonial officers in the West Indies, and obtaining
from them letters of introduction to the Treasurer-General
of France, he went home as a gentleman
who had acquired a fortune by successful enterprises
in the new world.</p>
<p>The pirate who not only possesses a sense of propriety
and a sensitive mind, but is also gifted with
<SPAN name="Page_191" id="Page_191"></SPAN>
an ability to write a book in which he describes his
own actions and adventures, is to be credited with
unusual advantages, and as Raveneau de Lussan
possessed these advantages, he has come down to
posterity as a high-minded pirate.</p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />