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<h2 class="chapter"><SPAN name="Chapter_XXIII" id="Chapter_XXIII"></SPAN>Chapter XXIII</h2>
<h2>A True-Hearted Sailor draws his Sword</h2>
<p>Feeling now quite sure that he could do
what he pleased on shore as well as at sea,
Blackbeard swore more, swaggered more, and
whenever he felt like it, sailed up and down the
coast and took a prize or two to keep the pot boiling
for himself and his men.</p>
<p>On one of these expeditions he went to Philadelphia,
and having landed, he walked about to see
what sort of a place it was, but the Governor of the
state, hearing of his arrival, quickly arranged to let
him know that the Quaker city allowed no black-hearted
pirate, with a ribbon-bedecked beard, to
promenade on Chestnut and Market streets, and
promptly issued a warrant for the sea-robber's arrest.
But Blackbeard was too sharp and too old a criminal
to be caught in that way, and he left the city
with great despatch.</p>
<p>The people along the coast of North Carolina
became very tired of Blackbeard and his men. All
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sorts of depredations were committed on vessels,
large and small, and whenever a ship was boarded
and robbed or whenever a fishing-vessel was laid
under contribution, Blackbeard was known to be at
the bottom of the business, whether he personally
appeared or not. To have this busy pirate for a
neighbor was extremely unpleasant, and the North
Carolina settlers greatly longed to get rid of him.
It was of no use for them to ask their own State
Government to suppress this outrageous scoundrel,
and although their good neighbor, South Carolina,
might have been willing to help them, she was too
poor at that time and had enough to do to take care
of herself.</p>
<p>Not knowing, or not caring for the strong feeling
of the settlers against him, Blackbeard continued
in his wicked ways, and among other crimes he captured
a small vessel and treated the crew in such a
cruel and atrocious manner that the better class of
North Carolinians vowed they would stand him no
longer, and they therefore applied to Governor
Spotswood, of Virginia, and asked his aid in putting
down the pirates. The Virginians were very willing
to do what they could for their unfortunate neighbors.
The legislature offered a reward for the capture
of Blackbeard or any of his men; but the
Governor, feeling that this was not enough, determined
to do something on his own responsibility,
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for he knew very well that the time might come
when the pirate vessels would begin to haunt Virginia
waters.</p>
<p>There happened to be at that time two small
British men-of-war in Hampton Roads, and although
the Governor had no authority to send
these after the pirates, he fitted out two sloops at
his own expense and manned them with the best
fighting men from the war-vessels. One of the
sloops he put under Captain Brand, and the other
under Captain Maynard, both brave and experienced
naval officers. All preparations were made
with the greatest secrecy—for if Blackbeard had
heard of what was going on, he would probably
have decamped—and then the two sloops went out
to sea with a commission from the Governor to capture
Blackbeard, dead or alive. This was a pretty
heavy contract, but Brand and Maynard were courageous
men and did not hesitate to take it.</p>
<p>The Virginians had been informed that the pirate
captain and his men were on a vessel in Ocracoke
Inlet, and when they arrived they found, to their
delight, that Blackbeard was there. When the
pirates saw the two armed vessels sailing into the
inlet, they knew very well that they were about to be
attacked, and it did not take them long to get ready
for a fight, nor did they wait to see what their enemy
was about to do. As soon as the sloops were near
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enough, Blackbeard, without waiting for any preliminary
exercises, such as a demand for surrender or
any nonsense of that sort, let drive at the intruders
with eight heavily loaded cannon.</p>
<p>Now the curtain had been rung up, and the play
began, and a very lively play it was. The guns
of the Virginians blazed away at the pirate ship,
and they would have sent out boats to board her
had not Blackbeard forestalled them. Boarding
was always a favorite method of fighting with the
pirates. They did not often carry heavy cannon,
and even when they did, they had but little fancy
for battles at long distances. What they liked was
to meet foes face to face and cut them down on
their own decks. In such combats they felt at
home, and were almost always successful, for there
were few mariners or sailors, even in the British
navy, who could stand against these brawny, glaring-eyed
dare-devils, who sprang over the sides of
a vessel like panthers, and fought like bulldogs.
Blackbeard had had enough cannonading, and he
did not wait to be boarded. Springing into a
boat with about twenty of his men, he rowed to
the vessel commanded by Maynard, and in a
few minutes he and his pirates surged on board
her.</p>
<p>Now there followed on the decks of that sloop
one of the most fearful hand-to-hand combats
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known to naval history. Pirates had often attacked
vessels where they met with strong resistance, but
never had a gang of sea-robbers fallen in with such
bold and skilled antagonists as those who now confronted
Blackbeard and his crew. At it they went,—cut,
fire, slash, bang, howl, and shout. Steel
clashed, pistols blazed, smoke went up, and blood
ran down, and it was hard in the confusion for a
man to tell friend from foe. Blackbeard was everywhere,
bounding from side to side, as he swung his
cutlass high and low, and though many a shot was
fired at him, and many a rush made in his direction,
every now and then a sailor went down beneath his
whirling blade.</p>
<p>But the great pirate had not boarded that ship
to fight with common men. He was looking for
Maynard, the commander. Soon he met him, and
for the first time in his life he found his match.
Maynard was a practised swordsman, and no matter
how hard and how swiftly came down the cutlass
of the pirate, his strokes were always evaded, and
the sword of the Virginian played more dangerously
near him. At last Blackbeard, finding that he could
not cut down his enemy, suddenly drew a pistol,
and was about to empty its barrels into the very
face of his opponent, when Maynard sent his sword-blade
into the throat of the furious pirate; the
great Blackbeard went down upon his back on the
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deck, and in the next moment Maynard put an end
to his nefarious career. Their leader dead, the few
pirates who were left alive gave up the fight, and
sprang overboard, hoping to be able to swim
ashore, and the victory of the Virginians was
complete.</p>
<p>The strength, toughness, and extraordinary vitality
of these feline human beings, who were known
as pirates, has often occasioned astonishment in ordinary
people. Their sun-tanned and hairy bodies
seemed to be made of something like wire, leather,
and India rubber, upon which the most tremendous
exertions, and even the infliction of severe wounds,
made but little impression. Before Blackbeard fell,
he received from Maynard and others no less than
twenty-five wounds, and yet he fought fearlessly to
the last, and when the panting officer sheathed his
sword, he felt that he had performed a most signal
deed of valor.</p>
<p>When they had broken up the pirate nest in
Ocracoke Inlet, the two sloops sailed to Bath,
where they compelled some of the unscrupulous
town officials to surrender the cargo which had
been stolen from the French vessel and stored
in the town by Blackbeard; then they sailed
proudly back to Hampton Roads, with the head
of the dreaded Blackbeard dangling from the end
of the bowsprit of the vessel he had boarded, and
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on whose deck he had discovered the fact, before
unknown to him, that a well-trained, honest man
can fight as well as the most reckless cutthroat who
ever decked his beard with ribbons, and swore
enmity to all things good.</p>
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