Blackbeard: Buccaneer
By RALPH D. PAINE
Illustrated by Frank E. Schoonover
THE PENN PUBLISHING COMPANY PHILADELPHIA
COPYRIGHT 1922 BY THE PENN PUBLISHING COMPANY
Blackbeard: Buccaneer Made in the U. S. A.
THE year of 1718 seems very dim and far away, but the tall lad who sauntered down to the harbor of Charles Town, South Carolina, on a fine, bright morning, was much like the youngsters of this generation. His clothes were quite different, it is true, and he lived in a queer, rough world, but he detested grammar and arithmetic and loved adventure, and would have made a sturdy tackle for a modern high-school football team. He wore a peaked straw hat of Indian weave, a linen shirt open at the throat, short breeches with silver buckles at the knees, and a flint-lock pistol hung from his leather belt.
He passed by scattered houses and stores which were mere log huts loopholed for defense, with shutters and doors of hewn plank heavy enough to stop a musket ball. The unpaved lanes wandered between mud holes in which pigs wallowed enjoyably. Negro slaves, half-naked and bearing heavy burdens, jabbered the dialects of the African jungle from which they had been kidnapped a few months before. Yemassee Indians clad in tanned deer-skins bartered with the merchants and hid their hatred of the English. Jovial, hard-riding gentlemen galloped in from the indigo plantations and dismounted at the tavern to drink and gamble and fight duels at the smallest excuse.
Young Jack Cockrell paid scant heed to these accustomed sights but walked as far as the wharf built of palmetto piling. The wide harbor and the sea that flashed beyond the outer bar were ruffled by a piping breeze out of the northeast. The only vessel at anchor was a heavily sparred brig whose bulwarks were high enough to hide the rows of cannon behind the closed ports.
The lad gazed at the shapely brig with a lively curiosity, as if here was something really interesting. Presently a boat splashed into the water and was tied alongside the vessel while a dozen of the crew tumbled in to sprawl upon the thwarts and shove the oars into the thole-pins. An erect, graceful man in a red coat and a great beaver hat roared a command from the stern-sheets and the pinnace pulled in the direction of the wharf.
Ralph Delahaye Paine
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Contents
ILLUSTRATIONS
THAT COURTEOUS PIRATE, CAPTAIN BONNET
CHAPTER II
CHAPTER III
HELD AS HOSTAGES TO BLACKBEARD
CHAPTER IV
THE CAPTIVE SEAMEN IN THE FORECASTLE
CHAPTER V
RELEASING A FEARFUL WEAPON
CHAPTER VI
THE VOYAGE OF THE LITTLE RAFT
CHAPTER VII
THE MIST OF THE CHEROKEE SWAMP
CHAPTER VIII
THE EPISODE OF THE WINDING CREEK
CHAPTER IX
BLACKBEARD'S ERRAND IS INTERRUPTED
CHAPTER X
THE SEA URCHIN AND THE CARPENTER'S MATE
CHAPTER XI
JACK JOURNEYS AFOOT
CHAPTER XII
A PRIVATE ACCOUNT TO SETTLE
CHAPTER XIII
OUR HEROES SEEK SECLUSION
CHAPTER XIV
BLACKBEARD APPEARS IN FIRE AND BRIMSTONE
CHAPTER XV
MR. PETER FORBES MOURNS HIS NEPHEW
CHAPTER XVI
NED RACKHAM'S PLANS GO MUCH AMISS
CHAPTER XVII
THE GREAT FIGHT OF CAPTAIN TEACH
CHAPTER XVIII
THE OLD BUCCANEER IS LOYAL
CHAPTER XIX
THE QUEST FOR PIRATES' GOLD
THE END
Transcriber's Notes: