<p><SPAN name="Page_224" id="Page_224"></SPAN></p>
<h2 class="chapter"><SPAN name="Chapter_XXV" id="Chapter_XXV"></SPAN>Chapter XXV</h2>
<h2>Bonnet again to the Front</h2>
<p>It must not be supposed that the late commander
of the <i>Revenge</i> continued to be satisfied,
as he sat in the cabin of Blackbeard's
vessel and made the entries of the day's sailing
and various performances. He obeyed the orders
of his usurping partner because he was obliged to
do so, but he did not hate Blackbeard any the less
because he had to keep quiet about it. He accompanied
his pirate chief on various cruises, among
which was the famous expedition to the harbor of
Charles Town where Blackbeard traded Mr. Wragg
and his companions for medicines.</p>
<p>Having a very fine fleet under him, Blackbeard
did a very successful business for some time, but
feeling that he had earned enough for the present,
and that it was time for him to take one of his
vacations, he put into an inlet in North Carolina,
where he disbanded his crew. So long as he was on
shore spending his money and having a good time, he
did not want to have a lot of men about him who
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would look to him to support them when they had
spent their portion of the spoils. Having no further
use for Bonnet, he dismissed him also, and did
not object to his resuming possession of his own
vessel. If the green pirate chose to go to sea again
and perhaps drown himself and his crew, it was
a matter of no concern to Blackbeard.</p>
<p>But this was a matter of very great concern to Stede
Bonnet, and he proceeded to prove that there were
certain branches of the piratical business in which
he was an adept, and second to none of his fellow-practitioners.
He wished to go pirating again, and
saw a way of doing this which he thought would
be far superior to any of the common methods. It
was about this time that King George of England,
very desirous of breaking up piracy, issued a proclamation
in which he promised pardon to any pirate
who would appear before the proper authorities,
renounce his evil practices, and take an oath of allegiance.
It also happened that very soon after this
proclamation had been issued, England went to war
with Spain. Being a man who kept himself posted
in the news of the world, so far as it was possible,
Bonnet saw in the present state of affairs a very
good chance for him to play the part of a wolf in
sheep's clothing, and he proceeded to begin his new
piratical career by renouncing piracy. So leaving
the <i>Revenge</i> in the inlet, he journeyed overland to<SPAN name="Page_226" id="Page_226"></SPAN>
Bath; there he signed pledges, took oaths, and did
everything that was necessary to change himself
from a pirate captain to a respectable commander
of a duly authorized British privateer. Returning
to his vessel with all the papers in his pocket necessary
to prove that he was a loyal and law-abiding
subject of Great Britain, he took out regular clearance
papers for St. Thomas, which was a British
naval station, and where he declared he was going
in order to obtain a commission as a privateer.</p>
<p>Now the wily Bonnet had everything he wanted
except a crew. Of course it would not do for him,
in his present respectable capacity, to go about enlisting
unemployed pirates, but at this point fortune
again favored him; he knew of a desert island not
very far away where Blackbeard, at the end of his
last cruise, had marooned a large party of his men.
This heartless pirate had not wanted to take all of
his followers into port, because they might prove
troublesome and expensive to him, and so he had
put a number of them on this island, to live or die
as the case might be. Bonnet went over to this
island, and finding the greater part of these men still
surviving, he offered to take them to St. Thomas
in his vessel if they would agree to work the ship
to port. This proposition was of course joyfully
accepted, and very soon the <i>Revenge</i> was manned
with a complete crew of competent desperadoes.</p>
<p><SPAN name="Page_227" id="Page_227"></SPAN></p>
<p>All these operations took a good deal of time,
and, at last, when everything was ready for Bonnet
to start out on his piratical cruise, he received
information which caused him to change his mind,
and to set forth on an errand of a very different
kind. He had supposed that Blackbeard, whom he
had never forgiven for the shameful and treacherous
manner in which he had treated him, was still on
shore enjoying himself, but he was told by the
captain of a small trading vessel that the old pirate
was preparing for another cruise, and that he was
then in Ocracoke Inlet. Now Bonnet folded his
arms and stamped his feet upon the quarter-deck.
The time had come for him to show that the name
of his vessel meant something. Never before had
he had an opportunity for revenging himself on
anybody, but now that hour had arrived. He
would revenge himself upon Blackbeard!</p>
<p>The implacable Bonnet sailed out to sea in a
truly warlike frame of mind. He was not going
forth to prey upon unresisting merchantmen; he
was on his way to punish a black-hearted pirate, a
faithless scoundrel, who had not only acted knavishly
toward the world in general, but had behaved most
disloyally and disrespectfully toward a fellow pirate
chief. If he could once run the <i>Revenge</i> alongside
the ship of the perfidious Blackbeard, he would
show him what a green hand could do.</p>
<p><SPAN name="Page_228" id="Page_228"></SPAN></p>
<p>When Bonnet reached Ocracoke Inlet, he was
deeply disappointed to find that Blackbeard had
left that harbor, but he did not give up the pursuit.
He made hot chase after the vessel of his pirate
enemy, keeping a sharp lookout in hopes of discovering
some signs of him. If the enraged Bonnet
could have met the ferocious Blackbeard face to
face, there might have been a combat which would
have relieved the world of two atrocious villains,
and Captain Maynard would have been deprived of
the honor of having slain the most famous pirate
of the day.</p>
<p>Bonnet was a good soldier and a brave man,
and although he could not sail a ship, he understood
the use of the sword even better, perhaps,
than Blackbeard, and there is good reason to believe
that if the two ships had come together, their respective
crews would have allowed their captains to
fight out their private quarrel without interference,
for pirates delight in a bloody spectacle, and this
would have been to them a rare diversion of the
kind.</p>
<p>But Bonnet never overtook Blackbeard, and the
great combat between the rival pirates did not take
place. After vainly searching for a considerable
time for a trace or sight of Blackbeard, the baffled
Bonnet gave up the pursuit and turned his mind to
other objects. The first thing he did was to change
<SPAN name="Page_229" id="Page_229"></SPAN>
the name of his vessel; if he could not be revenged,
he would not sail in the <i>Revenge</i>. Casting
about in his mind for a good name, he decided to
call her the <i>Royal James</i>. Having no intention of
respecting his oaths or of keeping his promises, he
thought that, as he was going to be disloyal, he
might as well be as disloyal as he could, and so he
gave his ship the name assumed by the son of James
the Second, who was a pretender to the throne, and
was then in France plotting against the English government.</p>
<p>The next thing he did was to change his own
name, for he thought this would make matters better
for him if he should be captured after entering
upon his new criminal career. So he called himself
Captain Thomas, by which name he was afterwards
known.</p>
<p>When these preliminaries had been arranged, he
gathered his crew together and announced that instead
of going to St. Thomas to get a commission
as a privateer, he had determined to keep on in his
old manner of life, and that he wished them to
understand that not only was he a pirate captain,
but that they were a pirate crew. Many of the men
were very much surprised at this announcement,
for they had thought it a very natural thing for
the green-hand Bonnet to give up pirating after he
had been so thoroughly snubbed by Blackbeard, and
<SPAN name="Page_230" id="Page_230"></SPAN>
they had not supposed that he would ever think
again of sailing under a black flag.</p>
<p>However, the crew's opinion of the green-hand
captain had been a good deal changed. In his various
cruises he had learned a good deal about navigation,
and could now give very fair orders, and his furious
pursuit of Blackbeard had also given him a reputation
for reckless bravery which he had not enjoyed
before. A man who was chafing and fuming for a
chance of a hand-to-hand conflict with the greatest
pirate of the day must be a pretty good sort of
a fellow from their point of view. Moreover, their
strutting and stalking captain, so recently balked of
his dark revenge, was a very savage-looking man,
and it would not be pleasant either to try to persuade
him to give up his piratical intention, or to decline
to join him in carrying it out; so the whole of the
crew, minor officers and men, changed their minds
about going to St. Thomas, and agreed to hoist
the skull and cross-bones, and to follow Captain
Bonnet wherever he might lead.</p>
<p>Bonnet now cruised about in grand style and
took some prizes on the Virginia coast, and then
went up into Delaware Bay, where he captured such
ships as he wanted, and acted generally in the most
domineering and insolent fashion. Once, when he
stopped near the town of Lewes, in order to send
some prisoners ashore, he sent a message to the officers
<SPAN name="Page_231" id="Page_231"></SPAN>
of the town to the effect that if they interfered
with his men when they came ashore, he would open
fire upon the town with his cannon, and blow every
house into splinters. Of course the citizens, having
no way of defending themselves, were obliged to
allow the pirates to come on shore and depart
unmolested.</p>
<p>Then after this the blustering captain captured
two valuable sloops, and wishing to take them along
with him without the trouble of transferring their
cargoes to his own vessel, he left their crews on
board, and ordered them to follow him wherever he
went. Some days after that, when one of the
vessels seemed to be sailing at too great a distance,
Bonnet quickly let her captain know that he was
not a man to be trifled with, and sent him the message
that if he did not keep close to the <i>Royal James</i>,
he would fire into him and sink him to the bottom.</p>
<p>After a time Bonnet put into a North Carolina
port in order to repair the <i>Royal James</i>, which was
becoming very leaky, and seeing no immediate
legitimate way of getting planks and beams enough
with which to make the necessary repairs, he captured
a small sloop belonging in the neighborhood,
and broke it up in order to get the material he
needed to make his own vessel seaworthy.</p>
<p>Now the people of the North Carolina coast very
seldom interfered with pirates, as we have seen, and
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it is likely that Bonnet might have stayed in port
as long as he pleased, and repaired and refitted his
vessel without molestation if he had bought and
paid for the planks and timber he required. But
when it came to boldly seizing their property, that
was too much even for the people of the region,
and complaints of Bonnet's behavior spread from
settlement to settlement, and it very soon became
known all down the coast that there was a pirate in
North Carolina who was committing depredations
there and was preparing to set out on a fresh cruise.</p>
<p>When these tidings came to Charles Town, the
citizens were thrown into great agitation. It had
not been long since Blackbeard had visited their
harbor, and had treated them with such brutal insolence,
and there were bold spirits in the town
who declared that if any effort by them could prevent
another visitation of the pirates, that effort
should be made. There was no naval force in the
harbor which could be sent out to meet the pirates,
who were coming down the coast; but Mr. William
Rhett, a private gentleman of position in the place,
went to the Governor and offered to fit out, at
his own expense, an expedition for the purpose
of turning away from their city the danger which
threatened it.</p>
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