COPYRIGHT, 1920, BY
HARCOURT, BRACE AND COMPANY, INC.
Twelfth printing, May, 1940
PRINTED IN THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
BY QUINN & BODEN COMPANY, INC., RAHWAY, N. J.
FULL-PAGE ILLUSTRATIONS
|
"If a man starts to haul on that line, I'll shoot him dead!" [Frontispiece] | |
| FACING | |
| PAGE | |
| "Ho, ho, young woodcock, and how do ye like the company of Stede Bonnet's rovers?" | [23] |
| "Don't say a word—sh!—easy there—are you awake?" | [143] |
| A sudden red glare on the walls of the chasm | [223] |
| Job had bracketed his target | [247] |
THE BLACK BUCCANEER
CHAPTER I
On the morning of the 15th of July, 1718, anyone who had been standing on the low rocks of the Penobscot bay shore might have seen a large, clumsy boat of hewn planking making its way out against the tide that set strongly up into the river mouth. She was loaded deep with a shifting, noisy cargo that lifted white noses and huddled broad, woolly backs—in fact, nothing less extraordinary than fifteen fat Southdown sheep and a sober-faced collie-dog. The crew of this remarkable craft consisted of a sinewy, bearded man of forty-five who minded sheet and tiller in the stern, and a boy of fourteen, tall and broad for his age, who was constantly employed in soothing and restraining the bleating flock.
No one was present to witness the spectacle because, in those remote days, there were scarcely a thousand white men on the whole coast of Maine from Kittery to Louisberg, while at this season of the year the Indians were following the migrating game along the northern rivers. The nearest settlement was a tiny log hamlet, ten miles up the bay, which the two voyagers had left that morning.