<SPAN name="THE_LIFE_OF_BENITO_DE_SOTO_THE_PIRATE_OF_THE_MORNING_STAR"></SPAN>
<h2>THE LIFE OF BENITO DE SOTO THE PIRATE OF THE MORNING STAR.</h2>
The following narrative of the career of a desperate pirate who was
executed in Gibraltar in the month of January, 1830, is one of two
letters from the pen of the author of "the Military Sketch-Book."
The writer says Benito de Soto "had been a prisoner in the garrison
for nineteen months, during which time the British Government
spared neither the pains not expense to establish a full train of
evidence against him. The affair had caused the greatest excitement
here, as well as at Cadiz, owing to the development of the
atrocities which marked the character of this man, and the
diabolical gang of which he was the leader. Nothing else is talked
of; and a thousand horrors are added to his guilt, which, although
he was guilty enough, he has no right to bear. The following is all
the authentic information I could collect concerning him. I have
drawn it from his trial, from the confession of his accomplices,
from the keeper of his prison, and not a little from his own lips.
It will be found more interesting than all the tales and sketches
furnished in the 'Annuals,' magazines, and other vehicles of
invention, from the simple fact--that it is truth and not fiction."
<p>Benito de Soto was a native of a small village near Courna; he
was bred a mariner, and was in the guiltless exercise of his
calling at Buenos Ayres, in the year 1827. A vessel was there being
fitted out for a voyage to the coast of Africa, for the smuggling
of slaves; and as she required a strong crew, a great number of
sailors were engaged, amongst whom was Soto. The Portuguese of
South America have yet a privilege of dealing in slaves on a
certain part of the African coast, but it was the intention of the
captain of this vessel to exceed the limits of his trade, and to
run farther down, so as to take his cargo of human beings from a
part of the country which was proscribed, in the certainty of being
there enabled to purchase slaves at a much lower rate than he could
in the regular way; or, perhaps, to take away by force as many as
he could stow away into his ship. He therefore required a
considerable number of hands for the enterprise; and in such a
traffic, it may be easily conceived, that the morals of the crew
could not be a subject of much consideration with the employer.
French, Spanish, Portuguese, and others, were entered on board,
most of them renegadoes, and they set sail on their evil voyage,
with every hope of infamous success.</p>
<p>Those who deal in evil carry along with them the springs of
their own destruction, upon which they will tread, in spite of
every caution, and their imagined security is but the brink of the
pit into which they are to fall. It was so with the captain of this
slave-ship. He arrived in Africa, took in a considerable number of
slaves, and in order to complete his cargo, went on shore, leaving
his mate in charge of the vessel. This mate was a bold, wicked,
reckless and ungovernable spirit, and perceiving in Benito de Soto
a mind congenial with his own, he fixed on him as a fit person to
join in a design he had conceived, of running away with the vessel,
and becoming a pirate. Accordingly the mate proposed his plan to
Soto, who not only agreed to join in it, but declared that he
himself had been contemplating a similar enterprise during the
voyage. They both were at once of a mind, and they lost no time in
maturing their plot.</p>
<p>Their first step was to break the matter to the other members of
the crew. In this they proceeded cautiously, and succeeded so far
as to gain over twenty-two of the whole, leaving eighteen who
remained faithful to their trust. Every means were used to corrupt
the well disposed; both persuasion and threats were resorted to,
but without effect, and the leader of the conspiracy, the mate,
began to despair of obtaining the desired object. Soto, however,
was not so easily depressed. He at once decided on seizing the ship
upon the strength of his party: and without consulting the mate, he
collected all the arms of the vessel, called the conspirators
together, put into each of their possession a cutlass and a brace
of pistols, and arming himself in like manner, advanced at the head
of the gang, drew his sword, and declared the mate to be the
commander of the ship, and the men who joined him part owners.
Still, those who had rejected the evil offer remained unmoved; on
which Soto ordered out the boats, and pointing to the land, cried
out, "There is the African coast; this is our ship--one or the
other must be chosen by every man on board within five
minutes."</p>
<p>This declaration, although it had the effect of preventing any
resistance that might have been offered by the well disposed, to
the taking of the vessel, did not change them from their purpose;
they still refused to join in the robbery, and entered one by one
into the boat, at the orders of Soto, and with but one pair of oars
(all that was allowed to them) put off for the shore, from which
they were then ten miles distant. Had the weather continued calm,
as it was when the boat left the ship, she would have made the
shore by dusk; but unhappily a strong gale of wind set in shortly
after her departure, and she was seen by Soto and his gang
struggling with the billows and approaching night, at such a
distance from the land as she could not possibly accomplish while
the gale lasted. All on board the ship agreed in opinion that the
boat could not live, as they flew away from her at the rate of ten
knots an hour, under close reefed topsails, leaving their unhappy
messmates to their inevitable fate. Those of the pirates who were
lately executed at Cadiz, declared that every soul in the boat
perished.<br/>
</p>
<center>
<ANTIMG src="./images/166.jpg" alt="The Pirates carrying rum on shore to purchase slaves" height-obs="600" width-obs="507">
</center>
<h4>
<i>
The Pirates carrying rum on shore to purchase
slaves.
</i>
</h4>
The drunken uproar which that night reigned in the pirate ship was
in horrid unison with the raging elements around her; contention
and quarrelling followed the brutal ebriety of the pirates; each
evil spirit sought the mastery of the others, and Soto's, which was
the fiend of all, began to grasp and grapple for its proper
place--the head of such a diabolical community.
<p>The mate (now the chief) at once gave the reins to his ruffian
tyranny; and the keen eye of Soto saw that he who had fawned with
him the day before, would next day rule him with an iron rod.
Prompt in his actions as he was penetrating in his judgment, he had
no sooner conceived a jealousy of the leader than he determined to
put him aside; and as his rival lay in his drunken sleep, Soto put
a pistol to his head, and deliberately shot him. For this act he
excused himself to the crew, by stating to them that it was in
<i>their</i> protection he did the act; that <i>their</i> interest
was the other's death; and concluded by declaring himself their
leader, and promising a golden harvest to their future labors,
provided they obeyed him. Soto succeeded to the height of his
wishes, and was unanimously hailed by the crew as their
captain.</p>
<p>On board the vessel, as I before stated, were a number of
slaves, and these the pirates had well secured under hatches. They
now turned their attention to those half starved, half suffocated
creatures;--some were for throwing them overboard, while others,
not less cruel, but more desirous of gain, proposed to take them to
some port in one of those countries that deal in human beings, and
there sell them. The latter recommendation was adopted, and Soto
steered for the West Indies, where he received a good price for his
slaves. One of those wretched creatures, a boy, he reserved as a
servant for himself; and this boy was destined by Providence to be
the witness of the punishment of those white men who tore away from
their homes himself and his brethren. He alone will carry back to
his country the truth of Heaven's retribution, and heal the wounded
feelings of broken kindred with the recital of it.</p>
<p>The pirates now entered freely into their villainous pursuit,
and plundered many vessels; amongst others was an American brig,
the treatment of which forms the <i>chef d'oeuvre</i> of their
atrocity. Having taken out of this brig all the valuables they
could find, they hatched down all hands to the hold, except a black
man, who was allowed to remain on deck for the special purpose of
affording in his torture an amusing exhibition to Soto and his
gang. They set fire to the brig, then lay to, to observe the
progress of the flames; and as the miserable African bounded from
rope to rope, now climbing to the mast head--now clinging to the
shrouds--now leaping to one part of the vessel, and now to
another,--their enjoyment seemed raised to its heighest pitch. At
length the hatches opened to the devouring element, the tortured
victim of their fiendish cruelty fell exhausted into the flames,
and the horrid and revolting scene closed amidst the shouts of the
miscreants who had caused it.</p>
<p>Of their other exploits, that which ranks next in turpitude, and
which led to their overthrow, was the piracy of the Morning Star.
They fell in with that vessel near the island Ascension, in the
year 1828, as she was on her voyage from Ceylon to England. This
vessel, besides a valuable cargo, had on board several passengers,
consisting of a major and his wife, an assistant surgeon, two
civilians, about five and twenty invalid soldiers, and three or
four of their wives. As soon as Benito de Soto perceived the ship,
which was at daylight on the 21st of February, he called up all
hands, and prepared for attacking her; he was at the time steering
on an opposite course to that of the Morning Star. On reconnoitring
her, he at first supposed she was a French vessel; but Barbazan,
one of his crew, who was himself a Frenchman, assured him the ship
was British. "So much the better," exclaimed Soto, in English (for
he could speak that language), "we shall find the more booty." He
then ordered the sails to be squared, and ran before the wind in
chase of his plunder, from which he was about two leagues
distant.</p>
<p>The Defensor de Pedro, the name of the pirate ship, was a fast
sailer, but owing to the press of canvas which the Morning Star
hoisted soon after the pirate had commenced the chase, he did not
come up with her so quickly as he had expected: the delay caused
great uneasiness to Soto, which he manifested by muttering curses,
and restlessness of manner. Sounds of savage satisfaction were to
be heard from every mouth but his at the prospect; he alone
expressed his anticipated pleasure by oaths, menaces, and mental
inquietude. While Barbazan was employed in superintending the
clearing of the decks, the arming and breakfasting of the men, he
walked rapidly up and down, revolving in his mind the plan of the
approaching attack, and when interrupted by any of the crew, he
would run into a volley of imprecations. In one instance, he struck
his black boy a violent blow with a telescope, because he asked him
if he would have his morning cup of chocolate; as soon, however, as
he set his studding sails, and perceived that he was gaining on the
Morning Star, he became somewhat tranquil, began to eat heartily of
cold beef, drank his chocolate at a draught, and coolly sat down on
the deck to smoke a cigar.</p>
<p>In less than a quarter of an hour, the pirate had gained
considerable on the other vessel. Soto now, without rising from
where he sat, ordered a gun, with blank cartridge, to be fired, and
the British colors to be hoisted: but finding this measure had not
the effect of bringing the Morning Star to, he cried out, "Shot the
long gun and give it her point blank." The order was obeyed, but
the shot fell short of the intention, on which he jumped up and
cursed the fellows for bunglers who had fired the gun. He then
ordered them to load with canister shot, and took the match in his
own hand. He did not, however, fire immediately, but waited until
he was nearly abreast of his victim; then directing the aim
himself, and ordering a man to stand by the flag to haul it down,
fired with an air that showed he was sure of his mark. He then ran
to haul up the Colombian colors, and having done so, cried out
through the speaking trumpet, "Lower your boat down this moment,
and let your captain come on board with his papers."</p>
<p>During this fearful chase the people on board the Morning Star
were in the greatest alarm; but however their apprehensions might
have been excited, that courage, which is so characteristic of a
British sailor, never for a moment forsook the captain. He boldly
carried on sail, and although one of the men fell from a wound, and
the ravages of the shot were every where around him, he determined
not to strike. But unhappily he had not a single gun on board, and
no small arms that could render his courage availing. The tears of
the women, and the prudent advice of the passengers overcoming his
resolution, he permitted himself to be guided by the general
opinion. One of the passengers volunteered himself to go on board
the pirate, and a boat was lowered for the purpose. Both vessels
now lay to within fifty yards of each other, and a strong hope
arose in those on board the Morning Star, that the gentleman who
had volunteered to go to the pirate, might, through his exertions,
avert, at least, the worst of the dreaded calamity.</p>
<p>Some people here, in their quiet security, have made no scruple
of declaring, that the commanding officer of the soldiers on board
should not have so tamely yielded to the pirate, particularly as he
had his wife along with him, and consequently a misfortune to
dread, that might be thought even worse than death: but all who
knew the true state of the circumstances, and reflect upon it, will
allow that he adopted the only chance of escaping that, which was
to be most feared by a husband. The long gun, which was on a pivot
in the centre of the pirate ship, could in a few shots sink the
Morning Star; and even had resistance been made to the pirates as
they boarded her--had they been killed or made prisoners--the
result would not be much better. It was evident that the Defensor
de Pedro was the best sailer, consequently the Morning Star could
not hope to escape; in fact, submission or total destruction was
the only choice. The commanding officer, therefore, acted for the
best when he recommended the former. There was some slight hope of
escaping with life, and without personal abuse, by surrendering,
but to contend must be inevitable death.</p>
<p>The gentleman who had gone in a boat to the pirate returned in a
short time, exhibiting every proof of the ill treatment he had
received from Soto and his crew. It appears that when the villains
learned that he was not the captain, they fell upon and beat him,
as well as the sailors along with him, in a most brutal manner, and
with the most horrid imprecations told him, that if the captain did
not instantly come, on his return to the vessel, they would blow
the ship out of the water. This report as once decided the captain
in the way he was to act. Without hesitation he stepped into the
boat, taking with him his second mate, three soldiers and a sailor
boy, and proceeded to the pirate. On going on board that vessel,
along with the mate, Soto, who stood near the mainmast, with his
drawn cutlass in his hand, desired him to approach, while the mate
was ordered, by Barbazan, to go to the forecastle. Both these
unfortunate individuals obeyed, and were instantly slaughtered.</p>
<p>Soto now ordered six picked men to descend into the boat,
amongst whom was Barbazan. To him the leader addressed his orders,
the last of which was, to take care to put all in the prize to
death, and then sink her.</p>
<p>The six pirates, who proceeded to execute his savage demand,
were all armed alike,--they each carried a brace of pistols, a
cutlass and a long knife. Their dress was composed of a sort of
coarse cotton chequered jacket and trowsers, shirts that were open
at the collar, red woollen caps, and broad canvas waistbelts, in
which were the pistols and the knives. They were all athletic men,
and seemed such as might well be trusted with the sanguinary errand
on which they were despatched. While the boat was conveying them,
Soto held in his hand a cutlass, reddened with the blood of the
murdered captain, and stood scowling on them with silence: while
another ruffian, with a lighted match, stood by the long gun, ready
to support the boarding, if necessary, with a shot that would sweep
the deck.</p>
<p>As the boarders approached the Morning Star, the terror of the
females became excessive; they clung to their husbands in despair,
who endeavored to allay their fears by their own vain hopes,
assuring them that a quiet submission nothing more than the plunder
of the vessel was to be apprehended. But a few minutes miserably
undeceived them. The pirates rapidly mounted the side, and as they
jumped on deck, commenced to cut right and left at all within their
reach, uttering at the same time the most dreadful oaths. The
females, screaming, hurried to hide themselves below as well as
they were able, and the men fell or fled before the pirates,
leaving them entire masters of the decks.<br/>
</p>
<center>
<ANTIMG src="./images/172.jpg" alt="The mate begging for his life" height-obs="495" width-obs="600">
</center>
<h4><i>The mate begging for his life.</i></h4>
When the pirates had succeeded in effectually prostrating all the
people on deck, they drove most of them below, and reserved the
remainder to assist in their operations. Unless the circumstances
be closely examined, it may be wondered how six men could have so
easily overcome a crew of English seamen supported by about twenty
soldiers with a major at their head:--but it will not appear so
surprising, when it is considered that the sailors were altogether
unarmed, the soldiers were worn out invalids, and more
particularly, that the pirate carried a heavy long gun, ready to
sink her victim at a shot. Major Logie was fully impressed with the
folly of opposing so powerful and desperate an enemy, and therefore
advised submission as the only course for the safety of those under
his charge; presuming no doubt that something like humanity might
be found in the breasts even of the worst of men. But alas! he was
woefully deceived in his estimate of the villains' nature, and
felt, when too late, that even death would have been preferable to
the barbarous treatment he was forced to endure.
<p>Beaten, bleeding, terrified, the men lay huddled together in the
hold, while the pirates proceeded in their work of pillage and
brutality. Every trunk was hauled forth, every portable article of
value heaped for the plunder; money, plate, charts, nautical
instruments, and seven parcels of valuable jewels, which formed
part of the cargo; these were carried from below on the backs of
those men whom the pirates selected to assist them, and for two
hours they were thus employed, during which time Soto stood upon
his own deck directing the operations; for the vessels were within
a hundred yards of each other. The scene which took place in the
cabin exhibited a licentious brutality. The sick officer, Mr.
Gibson, was dragged from his berth; the clothes of the other
passengers stripped from their backs, and the whole of the cabin
passengers driven on deck, except the females, whom they locked up
in the round-house on deck, and the steward, who was detained to
serve the pirates with wine and eatables. This treatment, no doubt
hastened the death of Gibson; the unfortunate gentleman did not
long survive it. As the passengers were forced up the cabin ladder,
the feelings of Major Logie, it may be imagined, were of the most
heart-rending description. In vain did he entreat to be allowed to
remain; he was hurried away from even the chance of protecting his
defenceless wife, and battened down with the rest in the hold,
there to be racked with the fearful apprehensions of their almost
certain doom.</p>
<p>The labors of the robbers being now concluded, they sat down to
regale themselves, preparatory to the <i>chef d'oeuvre</i> of their
diabolical enterprise; and a more terrible group of demi-devils,
the steward declares, could not be well imagined than commanded his
attention at the cabin table. However, as he was a Frenchman, and
naturally polite, he acquitted himself of the office of cup-bearer,
if not as gracefully, at least as anxiously, as ever did Ganymede
herself. Yet, notwithstanding this readiness to serve the visitors
in their gastronomic desires, the poor steward felt ill-requited;
he was twice frightened into an icicle, and twice thawed back into
conscious horror, by the rudeness of those he entertained. In one
instance, when he had filled out a sparkling glass for a ruffian,
and believed he had quite won the heart of the drinker by the act,
he found himself grasped roughly and tightly by the throat, and the
point of a knife staring him in the face. It seems the fellow who
thus seized him, had felt between his teeth a sharp bit of broken
glass, and fancying that something had been put in the wine to
poison him, he determined to prove his suspicions by making the
steward swallow what remained in the bottle from which the liquor
had been drawn, and thus unceremoniously prefaced his command;
however, ready and implicit obedience averted further bad
consequences. The other instance of the steward's jeopardy was
this; when the repast was ended, one of the gentlemen coolly
requested him to waive all delicacy, and point out the place in
which the captain's money was concealed. He might as well have
asked him to produce the philosopher's stone. However, pleading the
truth was of no use; his determined requisitor seconded the demand
by snapping a pistol at his breast; having missed fire, he
recocked, and again presented; but the fatal weapon was struck
aside by Barbazan, who reproved the rashness with a threat, and
thus averted the steward's impending fate. It was then with
feelings of satisfaction he heard himself ordered to go down to the
hold, and in a moment he was bolted in among his fellow
sufferers.</p>
<p>The ruffians indulged in the pleasures of the bottle for some
time longer, and then having ordered down the females, treated them
with even less humanity than characterized their conduct towards
the others. The screams of the helpless females were heard in the
hold by those who were unable to render them assistance, and
agonizing, indeed, must those screams have been to their
incarcerated hearers! How far the brutality of the pirates was
carried in this stage of the horrid proceeding, we can only
surmise; fortunately, their lives were spared, although, as it
afterwards appeared, the orders of Soto were to butcher every being
on board; and it is thought that these orders were not put into
action, in consequence of the villains having wasted so much time
in drinking, and otherwise indulging themselves; for it was not
until the loud voice of their chief was heard to recall them, that
they prepared to leave the ship; they therefore contented
themselves with fastening the women within the cabin, heaping heavy
lumber on the hatches of the hold, and boring holes in the planks
of the vessel below the surface of the water, so that in destroying
the unhappy people at one swoop, they might make up for the lost
time. They then left the ship, sinking fast to her apparently
certain fate.</p>
<center>
<ANTIMG src="./images/176.jpg" alt="Horrid abuse of the helpless women in the cabin" height-obs="323" width-obs="600">
</center>
<h4><i>Horrid abuse of the helpless women in the cabin.</i></h4>
It may be reasonably supposed, bad as their conduct was towards the
females, and pitiable as was the suffering it produced, that the
lives of the whole left to perish were preserved through it; for
the ship must have gone down if the women had been either taken out
of her or murdered, and those in the hold inevitably have gone with
her to the bottom. But by good fortune, the females succeeded in
forcing their way out of the cabin, and became the means of
liberating the men confined in the hold. When they came on deck, it
was nearly dark, yet they could see the pirate ship at a
considerable distance, with all her sails set and bearing away from
them. They prudently waited, concealed from the possibility of
being seen by the enemy, and when the night fell, they crept to the
hatchway, and called out to the men below to endeavor to effect
their liberation, informing them that the pirate was away and out
of sight. They then united their efforts, and the lumber being
removed, the hatches gave way to the force below, so that the
released captives breathed of hope again. The delightful draught,
however, was checked, when the ship was found to contain six feet
of water! A momentary collapse took possession of all their newly
excited expectations; cries and groans of despair burst forth, but
the sailors' energy quickly returned, and was followed by that of
the others; they set to work at the pumps, and by dint of labor
succeeded in keeping the vessel afloat. Yet to direct her course
was impossible; the pirates having completely disabled her, by
cutting away her rigging and sawing the masts all the way through.
The eye of Providence, however, was not averted from the hapless
people, for they fell in with a vessel next day that relieved them
from their distressing situation, and brought them to England in
safety.
<p>We will now return to Soto, and show how the hand of that
Providence that secured his intended victims, fell upon himself and
his wicked associates. Intoxicated with their infamous success, the
night had far advanced before Soto learned that the people in the
Morning Star, instead of being slaughtered, were only left to be
drowned. The information excited his utmost rage. He reproached
Barbazan, and those who had accompanied them in the boarding, with
disobeying his orders, and declared that now there could be no
security for their lives. Late as the hour was, and long as he had
been steering away from the Morning Star, he determined to put
back, in the hope of effectually preventing the escape of those in
the devoted vessel, by seeing them destroyed before his eyes. Soto
was a follower of the principle inculcated by the old maxim, "Dead
men tell no tales;" and in pursuance of his doctrine, lost not a
moment in putting about and running back. But it was too late; he
could find no trace of the vessel, and so consoled himself with the
belief that she was at the bottom of the sea, many fathoms below
the ken and cognizance of Admiralty Courts.</p>
<p>Soto, thus satisfied, bent his course to Europe. On his voyage
he fell in with a small brig, boarded, plundered, sunk her, and,
that he might not again run the hazard of encountering living
witnesses of his guilt, murdered the crew, with the exception of
one individual, whom he took along with him, on account of his
knowledge of the course to Corunna, whither he intended to proceed.
But, faithful to his principles of self-protection, as soon as he
had made full use of the unfortunate sailor, and found himself in
sight of the destined port, he came up to him at the helm, which he
held in his hand, "My friend," said he "is that the harbor of
Corunna?"--"Yes," was the reply. "Then," rejoined Soto, "You have
done your duty well, and I am obliged to you for your services." On
the instant he drew a pistol and shot the man; then coolly flung
his body overboard, took the helm himself, and steered into his
native harbor as little concerned as if he had returned from an
honest voyage. At this port he obtained papers in a false name,
disposed of a great part of his booty, and after a short stay set
out for Cadiz, where he expected a market for the remainder. He had
a fair wind until he came within sight of the coast near that city.
It was coming on dark and he lay to, expecting to go into his
anchorage next morning, but the wind shifted to the westward, and
suddenly began to blow a heavy gale; it was right on the land. He
luffed his ship as close to the wind as possible, in order to clear
a point that stretched outward, and beat off to windward, but his
lee-way carried him towards the land, and he was caught when he
least expected the trap. The gale increased--the night grew pitchy
dark--the roaring breakers were on his lee-beam--the drifting
vessel strikes, rebounds, and strikes again--the cry of horror
rings through the flapping cordage, and despair is in the eyes of
the demon-crew. Helpless they lie amid the wrath of the storm, and
the darkened face of Heaven, for the first time, strikes terror on
their guilty hearts. Death is before them, but not with a merciful
quickness does he approach; hour after hour the frightful vision
glares upon them, and at length disappears only to come upon them
again in a more dreadful form. The tempest abates, and the sinners
were spared for the time.</p>
<p>As the daylight broke they took to their boats, and abandoned
the vessel to preserve their lives. But there was no repentance in
the pirates; along with the night and the winds went the voice of
conscience, and they thought no more of what had passed. They stood
upon the beach gazing at the wreck, and the first thought of Soto,
was to sell it, and purchase another vessel for the renewal of his
atrocious pursuits. With the marked decision of his character, he
proposed his intention to his followers, and received their full
approbation. The plan was instantly arranged; they were to present
themselves as honest, shipwrecked mariners to the authorities at
Cadiz; Soto was to take upon himself the office of mate, or
<i>contra maestra,</i> to an imaginary captain, and thus obtain
their sanction in disposing of the vessel. In their assumed
character, the whole proceeded to Cadiz, and presented themselves
before the proper officers of the marine. Their story was listened
to with sympathy, and for a few days every thing went on to their
satisfaction. Soto had succeeded so well as to conclude the sale of
the wreck with a broker, for the sum of one thousand seven hundred
and fifty dollars; the contract was signed, but fortunately the
money was not yet paid, when suspicion arose, from some
inconsistencies in the pirates' account of themselves, and six of
them were arrested by the authorities. Soto and one of his crew
instantly disappeared from Cadiz, and succeeded in arriving at the
neutral ground before Gibraltar, and six more made their escape to
the Carraccas.</p>
<p>None are permitted to enter the fortress of Gibraltar, without
permission from the governor, or a passport. Soto and his
companion, therefore, took up their quarters at a Posade on the
neutral ground, and resided there in security for several days. The
busy and daring mind of the former could not long remain inactive;
he proposed to his companion to attempt to enter the garrison in
disguise and by stealth, but could not prevail upon him to consent.
He therefore resolved to go in alone; and his object in doing so
was to procure a supply of money by a letter of credit which he
brought with him from Cadiz. His companion, more wise than he,
chose the safer course; he knew that the neutral ground was not
much controllable by the laws either of the Spanish or the English,
and although there was not much probability of being discovered, he
resolved not to trust to chance in so great a stake as his life;
and he proved to have been right in his judgment, for had he gone
to Gibraltar, he would have shared the same fate of his chief. This
man is the only one of the whole gang, who has not met with the
punishment of his crimes, for he succeeded in effecting his escape
on board some vessel. It is not even suspected to what country he
is gone; but his description, no doubt, is registered. The steward
of the Morning Star informed me, that he is a tall, stout man, with
fair hair, and fresh complexion, of a mild and gentle countenance,
but that he was one of the worst villains of the whole piratical
crew. I believe he is stated to be a Frenchman.</p>
<p>Soto secured his admission into the garrison by a false pass,
and took up his residence at an inferior tavern in a narrow lane,
which runs off the main street of Gibraltar, and is kept by a man
of the name of Basso. The appearance of this house suits well with
the associations of the worthy Benito's life. I have occasion to
pass the door frequently at night, for our barrack, (the Casement,)
is but a few yards from it. I never look at the place without
feeling an involuntary sensation of horror--the smoky and dirty
nooks--the distant groups of dark Spaniards, Moors, and Jews, their
sallow countenances made yellow by the fight of dim oil lamps--the
unceiled rafters of the rooms above, seen through unshuttered
windows and the consciousness of their having covered the atrocious
Soto, combine this effect upon me.</p>
<p>In this den the villain remained for a few weeks, and during
this time seemed to enjoy himself as if he had never committed a
murder. The story he told Basso of his circumstances was, that he
had come to Gibraltar on his way to Cadiz from Malaga, and was
merely awaiting the arrival of a friend. He dressed
expensively--generally wore a white hat of the best English
quality, silk stockings, white trowsers, and blue frock coat. His
whiskers were large and bushy, and his hair, which was very black,
profuse, long and naturally curled, was much in the style of a
London preacher of prophetic and anti-poetic notoriety. He was
deeply browned with the sun, and had an air and gait expressive of
his bold, enterprising, and desperate mind. Indeed, when I saw him
in his cell and at his trial, although his frame was attenuated
almost to a skeleton, the color of his face a pale yellow, his eyes
sunken, and hair closely shorn; he still exhibited strong traces of
what he had been, still retained his erect and fearless carriage,
his quick, fiery, and malevolent eye, his hurried and concise
speech, and his close and pertinent style of remark. He appeared to
me such a man as would have made a hero in the ranks of his
country, had circumstances placed him in the proper road to fame;
but ignorance and poverty turned into the most ferocious robber,
one who might have rendered service and been an honor to his sunken
country. I should like to hear what the phrenologists say of his
head; it appeared to me to be the most peculiar I had ever seen,
and certainly, as far as the bump of <i>destructiveness</i> went,
bore the theory fully out. It is rumored here that the skull has
been sent to the <i>savans</i> of Edinburg; if this be the case, we
shall no doubt be made acquainted with their sage opinions upon the
subject, and great conquerors will receive a farther assurance of
how much they resemble in their physical natures the greatest
murderers.</p>
<p>When I visited the pirate in the Moorish castle where he was
confined, he was sitting in his cold, narrow, and miserable cell,
upon a pallet of straw, eating his coarse meal from a tin plate. I
thought him more an object of pity than vengeance; he looked so
worn with disease, so crushed with suffering, yet so affable,
frank, and kind in his address; for he happened to be in a
communicative mood, a thing that was by no means common with him.
He spoke of his long confinement, till I thought the tears were
about to start from his eyes, and alluded to his approaching trial
with satisfaction; but his predominant characteristic, ferocity,
appeared in his small piercing black eyes before I left him, as he
alluded to his keeper, the Provost, in such a way that made me
suspect his desire for blood was not yet extinguished. When he
appeared in court on his trial, his demeanor was quite altered; he
seemed to me to have suddenly risen out of the wretch he was in his
cell, to all the qualities I had heard of him; he stood erect and
unembarrassed; he spoke with a strong voice, attended closely to
the proceedings, occasionally examined the witnesses, and at the
conclusion protested against the justice of his trial. He sometimes
spoke to the guards around him, and sometimes affected an air of
carelessness of his awful situation, which, however, did not sit
easy upon him. Even here the leading trait of his mind broke forth;
for when the interpreter commenced his office, the language which
he made use of being pedantic and affected, Soto interrupted him
thus, while a scowl sat upon his brow that terrified the man of
words: "I don't understand you, man; speak Spanish like others, and
I'll listen to you." When the dirk that belonged to Mr. Robertson,
the trunk and clothes taken from Mr. Gibson, and the pocket book
containing the ill-fated captain's handwriting were placed before
him, and proved to have been found in his room, and when the maid
servant of the tavern proved that she found the dirk under his
pillow every morning on arranging his bed; and when he was
confronted with his own black slave, between two wax lights, the
countenance of the villain appeared in its true nature, not
depressed nor sorrowful, but vivid and ferocious; and when the
patient and dignified governor, Sir George Don, passed the just
sentence of the law upon him, he looked daggers at his heart, and
assumed a horrid silence, more eloquent than words.</p>
<p>The criminal persisted up to the day before his execution in
asserting his innocence, and inveighing against the injustice of
his trial, but the certainty of his fate, and the awful voice of
religion, at length subdued him. He made an unreserved confession
of his guilt, and became truly penitent; gave up to the keeper the
blade of a razor which he had secreted between the soles of his
shoes for the acknowledged purpose of adding suicide to his crimes,
and seemed to wish for the moment that was to send him before his
Creator.</p>
<p>I witnessed his execution, and I believe there never was a more
contrite man than he appeared to be; yet there were no drivelling
fears upon him--he walked firmly at the tail of the fatal cart,
gazing sometimes at his coffin, sometimes at the crucifix which he
held in his hand. The symbol of divinity he frequently pressed to
his lips, repeated the prayers spoken in his ear by the attendant
clergyman, and seemed regardless of every thing but the world to
come. The gallows was erected beside the water, and fronting the
neutral ground. He mounted the cart as firmly as he had walked
behind it, and held up his face to Heaven and the beating rain,
calm, resigned, but unshaken; and finding the halter too high for
his neck, he boldly stepped upon his coffin, and placed his head in
the noose, then watching the first turn of the wheels, he murmured
"<i>adios todos</i>," ["Farewell, all."] and leaned forward to
facilitate his fall.</p>
<p>The black slave of the pirate stood upon the battery trembling
before his dying master to behold the awful termination of a series
of events, the recital of which to his African countrymen, when he
shall return to his home, will give them no doubt, a dreadful
picture of European civilization. The black boy was acquitted at
Cadiz, but the men who had fled to the Carraccas, as well as those
arrested after the wreck, were convicted, executed, their limbs
severed, and hung on tenter hooks, as a warning to all pirates.</p>
<center>
<ANTIMG src="./images/185.jpg" alt="The Rock of Gibraltar" height-obs="452" width-obs="600">
</center>
<h4><i>The Rock of Gibraltar.</i></h4>
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