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<h2 class="chapter"><SPAN name="Chapter_XXIV" id="Chapter_XXIV"></SPAN>Chapter XXIV</h2>
<h2>A Greenhorn under the Black Flag</h2>
<p>Early in the eighteenth century there lived
at Bridgetown, in the island of Barbadoes, a
very pleasant, middle-aged gentleman named
Major Stede Bonnet. He was a man in comfortable
circumstances, and had been an officer in the British
army. He had retired from military service, and had
bought an estate at Bridgetown, where he lived in
comfort and was respected by his neighbors.</p>
<p>But for some reason or other this quiet and reputable
gentleman got it into his head that he would
like to be a pirate. There were some persons who
said that this strange fancy was due to the fact that
his wife did not make his home pleasant for him,
but it is quite certain that if a man wants an excuse
for robbing and murdering his fellow-beings he
ought to have a much better one than the bad
temper of his wife. But besides the general reasons
why Major Bonnet should not become a pirate,
and which applied to all men as well as himself,
there was a special reason against his adoption of
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the profession of a sea-robber, for he was an out-and-out
landsman and knew nothing whatever of nautical
matters. He had been at sea but very little,
and if he had heard a boatswain order his man to
furl the keel, to batten down the shrouds, or to
hoist the forechains to the topmast yard, he would
have seen nothing out of the way in these commands.
He was very fond of history, and very
well read in the literature of the day. He was
accustomed to the habits of good society, and knew
a great deal about farming and horses, cows and
poultry, but if he had been compelled to steer a
vessel, he would not have known how to keep her
bow ahead of her stern.</p>
<p>But notwithstanding this absolute incapacity for
such a life, and the absence of any of the ordinary
motives for abandoning respectability and entering
upon a career of crime, Major Bonnet was determined
to become a pirate, and he became one. He
had money enough to buy a ship and to fit her out
and man her, and this he quietly did at Bridgetown,
nobody supposing that he was going to do anything
more than start off on some commercial cruise.
When everything was ready, his vessel slipped out
of the harbor one night, and after he was sailing
safely on the rolling sea he stood upon the quarter-deck
and proclaimed himself a pirate. It might not
be supposed that this was necessary, for the seventy
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men on board his ship were all desperate cutthroats,
of various nationalities, whom he had found in the
little port, and who knew very well what was expected
of them when they reached the sea. But if
Stede Bonnet had not proclaimed himself a pirate,
it is possible that he might not have believed, himself,
that he was one, and so he ran up the black
flag, with its skeleton or skull and cross-bones, he
girded on a great cutlass, and, folding his arms, he
ordered his mate to steer the vessel to the coast of
Virginia.</p>
<p>Although Bonnet knew so little about ships and
the sea, and had had no experience in piracy, his
men were practised seamen, and those of them who
had not been pirates before were quite ready and
very well fitted to become such; so when this green
hand came into the waters of Virginia he actually
took two or three vessels and robbed them of their
cargoes, burning the ships, and sending the crews
on shore.</p>
<p>This had grown to be a common custom among
the pirates, who, though cruel and hard-hearted, had
not the inducements of the old buccaneers to torture
and murder the crews of the vessels which they captured.
They could not hate human beings in general
as the buccaneers hated the Spaniards, and so
they were a little more humane to their prisoners,
setting them ashore on some island or desert coast,
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and letting them shift for themselves as best they
might. This was called marooning, and was somewhat
less heartless than the old methods of getting
rid of undesirable prisoners by drowning or beheading
them.</p>
<p>As Bonnet had always been rather conventional
in his ideas and had respected the customs of the
society in which he found himself, he now adopted
all the piratical fashions of the day, and when he
found himself too far from land to put the captured
crew on shore, he did not hesitate to make them
"walk the plank," which was a favorite device of the
pirates whenever they had no other way of disposing
of their prisoners. The unfortunate wretches, with
their hands tied behind them, were compelled, one
by one, to mount a plank which was projected over
the side of the vessel and balanced like a see-saw,
and when, prodded by knives and cutlasses, they
stepped out upon this plank, of course it tipped up,
and down they went into the sea. In this way,
men, women, and children slipped out of sight
among the waves as the vessel sailed merrily on.</p>
<p>In one branch of his new profession Bonnet rapidly
became proficient. He was an insatiable robber
and a cruel conqueror. He captured merchant
vessels all along the coast as high up as New England,
and then he came down again and stopped for
a while before Charles Town harbor, where he took
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a couple of prizes, and then put into one of the
North Carolina harbors, where it was always easy
for a pirate vessel to refit and get ready for further
adventures.</p>
<p>Bonnet's vessel was named the <i>Revenge</i>, which was
about as ill suited to the vessel as her commander
was ill fitted to sail her, for Bonnet had nobody to
revenge himself upon unless, indeed, it were his
scolding wife. But a good many pirate ships were
then called the <i>Revenge</i>, and Bonnet was bound to
follow the fashion, whatever it might be.</p>
<p>Very soon after he had stood upon the quarter-deck
and proclaimed himself a pirate his men had
discovered that he knew no more about sailing than
he knew about painting portraits, and although
there were under-officers who directed all the nautical
operations, the mass of the crew conceived a great
contempt for a landsman captain. There was much
grumbling and growling, and many of the men would
have been glad to throw Bonnet overboard and take
the ship into their own hands. But when any
symptoms of mutiny showed themselves, the pirates
found that although they did not have a sailor in
command over them, they had a very determined
and relentless master. Bonnet knew that the captain
of a pirate ship ought to be the most severe and
rigid man on board, and so, at the slightest sign of insubordination,
his grumbling men were put in chains
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or flogged, and it was Bonnet's habit at such times
to strut about the deck with loaded pistols, threatening
to blow out the brains of any man who dared to
disobey him. Recognizing that although their captain
was no sailor he was a first-class tyrant, the
rebellious crew kept their grumbling to themselves
and worked his ship.</p>
<p>Bonnet now pointed the bow of the <i>Revenge</i>
southward—that is, he requested somebody else to
see that it was done—and sailed to the Bay of
Honduras, which was a favorite resort of the pirates
about that time. And here it was that he first met
with the famous Captain Blackbeard. There can be
no doubt that our amateur pirate was very glad indeed
to become acquainted with this well-known professional,
and they soon became good friends. Blackbeard
was on the point of organizing an expedition,
and he proposed that Bonnet and his vessel should
join it. This invitation was gladly accepted, and
the two pirate captains started out on a cruise together.
Now the old reprobate, Blackbeard, knew
everything about ships and was a good navigator,
and it was not long before he discovered that his
new partner was as green as grass in regard to all
nautical affairs. Consequently, after having thought
the matter over for a time, he made up his mind
that Bonnet was not at all fit to command such a
fine vessel as the one he owned and had fitted out,
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and as pirates make their own laws, and perhaps do
not obey them if they happen not to feel like it,
Blackbeard sent for Bonnet to come on board his
ship, and then, in a manner as cold-blooded as if
he had been about to cut down a helpless prisoner,
Blackbeard told Bonnet that he was not fit to be a
pirate captain, that he intended to keep him on
board his own vessel, and that he would send somebody
to take charge of the <i>Revenge</i>.</p>
<p>This was a fall indeed, and Bonnet was almost
stunned by it. An hour before he had been proudly
strutting about on the deck of a vessel which belonged
to him, and in which he had captured many
valuable prizes, and now he was told he was to stay
on Blackbeard's ship and make himself useful in
keeping the log book, or in doing any other easy
thing which he might happen to understand. The
green pirate ground his teeth and swore bitterly
inside of himself, but he said nothing openly; on
Blackbeard's ship Blackbeard's decisions were not
to be questioned.</p>
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