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<h2 class="chapter"><SPAN name="Chapter_XXI" id="Chapter_XXI"></SPAN>Chapter XXI</h2>
<h2>Exit Buccaneer; Enter Pirate</h2>
<p>The buccaneers of the West Indies and
South America had grown to be a most
formidable body of reckless freebooters.
From merely capturing Spanish ships, laden with
the treasures taken from the natives of the new
world, they had grown strong enough to attack
Spanish towns and cities. But when they became
soldiers and marched in little armies, the patience
of the civilized world began to weaken: Panama,
for instance, was an important Spanish city; England
was at peace with Spain; therefore, when a
military force composed mainly of Englishmen, and
led by a British subject, captured and sacked the
said Spanish city, England was placed in an awkward
position; if she did not interfere with her buccaneers,
she would have a quarrel to settle with Spain.</p>
<p>Therefore it was that a new Governor was sent
to Jamaica with strict orders to use every power he
possessed to put down the buccaneers and to break
up their organization, and it was to this end that he
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set a thief to catch thieves and empowered the ex-pirate,
Morgan, to execute his former comrades.</p>
<p>But methods of conciliation, as well as threats of
punishment, were used to induce the buccaneers to
give up their illegal calling, and liberal offers were
made to them to settle in Jamaica and become law-abiding
citizens. They were promised grants of land
and assistance of various kinds in order to induce
them to take up the legitimate callings of planters
and traders.</p>
<p>But these offers were not at all tempting to the
Brethren of the Coast; from pirates <i>rampant</i> to
pirates <i>couchant</i> was too great a change, and some
of them, who found it impossible to embark on
piratical cruises, on account of the increasing difficulties
of fitting out vessels, returned to their original
avocations of cattle-butchering and beef-drying,
and some, it is said, chose rather to live among the
wild Indians and share their independent lives,
than to bind themselves to any form of honest
industry.</p>
<p>The French had also been very active in suppressing
the operations of their buccaneers, and
now the Brethren of the Coast, considered as an
organization for preying upon the commerce and
settlers of Spain, might be said to have ceased to
exist. But it must not be supposed that because
buccaneering had died out, that piracy was dead.<SPAN name="Page_194" id="Page_194"></SPAN>
If we tear down a wasps' nest, we destroy the abode
of a fierce and pitiless community, but we scatter
the wasps, and it is likely that each one of them,
in the unrestricted and irresponsible career to which
he has been unwillingly forced, will prove a much
more angry and dangerous insect than he had ever
been before.</p>
<p>This is what happened to these buccaneers who
would not give up a piratical life; driven away from
Jamaica, from San Domingo, and even from Tortuga,
they retained a resting-place only at New
Providence, an island in the Bahamas, and this they
did not maintain very long. Then they spread
themselves all over the watery world. They were
no longer buccaneers, they were no longer brothers
of any sort or kind, they no longer set out merely
to pillage and fight the Spaniards, but their attacks
were made upon people of every nation. English
ships and French ships, once safe from them, were
a welcome prey to these new pirates, unrestrained
by any kind of loyalty, even by any kind of enmity.
They were more rapacious, they were more cruel,
they were more like fiends than they had ever been
before. They were cowardly and they no longer
proceeded against towns which might be defended,
nor ran up alongside of a man-of-war to boldly
board her in the very teeth of her guns. They
confined themselves to attacks upon peaceable merchant
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vessels, often robbing them and then scuttling
them, delighted with the spectacle of a ship, with
all its crew, sinking hopelessly into the sea.</p>
<p>The scene of piratical operations in America was
now very much changed. The successors of the
Brothers of the Coast, no longer united by any
bonds of fellowship, but each pirate captain acting
independently in his own wicked way, was coming
up from the West Indies to afflict the seacoast of
our country.</p>
<p>The old buccaneers knew all about our southern
coast, for they were among the very first white men
who ever set foot on the shores of North and South
Carolina before that region had been settled by
colonists, and when the only inhabitants were the
wild Indians. These early buccaneers often used
its bays and harbors as convenient ports of refuge,
where they could anchor, divide spoils, take in fresh
water, and stay as long as they pleased without fear
of molestation. It was natural enough that when
the Spanish-hating buccaneer merged into the independent
pirate, who respected no flag, and preyed
upon ships of every nation, he should feel very
much at home on the Carolina coasts.</p>
<p>As the country was settled, and Charles Town,
now Charleston, grew to be a port of considerable
importance, the pirates felt as much at home in this
region as when it was inhabited merely by Indians.<SPAN name="Page_196" id="Page_196"></SPAN>
They frequently touched at little seaside settlements,
and boldly sailed into the harbor of Charles Town.
But, unlike the unfortunate citizens of Porto Bello
or Maracaibo, the American colonists were not
frightened when they saw a pirate ship anchored in
their harbors, for they knew its crew did not come
as enemies, but as friendly traders.</p>
<p>The early English colonists were not as prosperous
as they might have been if the mother country
had not been so anxious to make money out of
them. They were not allowed to import goods
from any country but England, and if they had products
or crops to export, they must be sold to English
merchants. For whatever they bought they
had to pay the highest prices, and they could not
send into the markets of the world to get the best
value for their own productions.</p>
<p>Therefore it was that a pirate ship was a very
welcome visitor in Charles Town harbor. She was
generally loaded with goods, which, as they were
stolen, her captain could afford to sell very cheaply
indeed, and as there was always plenty of Spanish
gold on board, her crew was not apt to haggle very
much in regard to the price of the spirits, the groceries,
or the provisions which they bought from the
merchants of the town. This friendly commerce
between the pirates and the Carolinians grew to be
so extensive that at one time the larger part of the
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coin in circulation in those colonies consisted of
Spanish gold pieces, which had been brought
in and used by the pirates for the purchase of
goods.</p>
<p>But a pirate is very seldom a person of discretion,
who knows when to leave well enough alone, and
so, instead of contenting themselves with robbing
and capturing the vessels belonging to people whom
their Charles Town friends and customers would
look upon as foreigners, they boldly sailed up and
down the coast, seeking for floating booty wherever
they might find it, and when a pirate vessel commanded
by an English captain and manned principally
by an English crew, fell in with a big
merchantman flying the English flag, they bore
down upon that vessel, just as if it had been French,
or Spanish, or Dutch, and if the crew were impertinent
enough to offer any resistance, they were cut
down and thrown overboard.</p>
<p>At last the pirates became so swaggeringly bold
and their captains so enterprising in their illegal
trading that the English government took vigorous
measures, not only to break up piracy, but to
punish all colonists who should encourage the freebooters
by commercial dealings with them. At
these laws the pirates laughed, and the colonists
winced, and there were many people in Charles
Town who vowed that if the King wanted them to
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help him put down piracy, he must show them some
other way of getting imported goods at reasonable
prices. So the pirates went on capturing merchantmen
whenever they had a chance, and the Carolinians
continued to look forward with interest to the
bargain days which always followed the arrival of a
pirate ship. But this state of things did not last,
and the time came when the people of Charles
Town experienced a change of mind. The planters
were now growing large quantities of rice, and
this crop became so valuable that the prosperity
of the colonies greatly increased. And now the
pirates also became very much interested in the
rice crops, and when they had captured four or
five vessels sailing out of Charles Town heavily
laden with rice, the people of that town suddenly
became aware of the true character of a pirate. He
was now in their eyes an unmitigated scoundrel who
not only stole goods from all nations, which he
brought to them and sold at low prices, but he actually
stole their goods, their precious rice which they
were sending to England.</p>
<p>The indignant citizens of Charles Town took a
bold stand, and such a bold one it was that when
part of a crew of pirates, who had been put ashore
by their comrades on account of a quarrel, made
their way to the town, thinking they could tell a
tale of shipwreck and rely upon the friendship of
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their old customers, they were taken into custody,
and seven out of the nine were hanged.</p>
<p>The occasional repetition of such acts as this,
and the exhibition of dangling pirates, hung up like
scarecrows at the entrance of the harbors, dampened
the ardor of the freebooters a good deal, and for
some years they kept away from the harbor of
Charles Town, which had once been to them such
a friendly port.</p>
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