<SPAN name="THE_LIFE_OF_CAPTAIN_EDWARD_LOW"></SPAN>
<h2>THE LIFE OF CAPTAIN EDWARD LOW.</h2>
This ferocious villain was born in Westminster, and received an
education similar to that of the common people in England. He was
by nature a pirate; for even when very young he raised
contributions among the boys of Westminster, and if they declined
compliance, a battle was the result. When he advanced a step
farther in life, he began to exert his ingenuity at low games, and
cheating all in his power; and those who pretended to maintain
their own right, he was ready to call to the field of combat.
<p>He went to sea in company with his brother, and continued with
him for three or four years. Going over to America, he wrought in a
rigging-house at Boston for some time. He then came home to see his
mother in England, returned to Boston, and continued for some years
longer at the same business. But being of a quarrelsome temper, he
differed with his master, and went on board a sloop bound for the
Bay of Honduras.</p>
<p>While there, he had the command of a boat employed in bringing
logwood to the ship. In that boat there were twelve men well armed,
to be prepared for the Spaniards, from whom the wood was taken by
force. It happened one day that the boat came to the ship just a
little before dinner was ready, and Low desired that they might
dine before they returned. The captain, however, ordered them a
bottle of rum, and requested them to take another trip, as no time
was to be lost. The crew were enraged, particularly Low, who took
up a loaded musket and fired at the captain, but missing him,
another man was shot, and they ran off with the boat. The next day
they took a small vessel, went on board her, hoisted a black flag,
and declared war with the whole world.</p>
<p>In their rovings, Low met with Lowther, who proposed that he
should join him, and thus promote their mutual advantage. Having
captured a brigantine, Low, with forty more, went on board her; and
leaving Lowther, they went to seek their own fortune.</p>
<p>Their first adventure was the capture of a vessel belonging to
Amboy, out of which they took the provisions, and allowed her to
proceed. On the same day they took a sloop, plundered her, and
permitted her to depart. The sloop went into Black Island, and sent
intelligence to the governor that Low was on the coast. Two small
vessels were immediately fitted out, but, before their arrival, Low
was beyond their reach. After this narrow escape, Low went into
port to procure water and fresh provisions; and then renewed his
search of plunder. He next sailed into the harbor of Port Rosemary,
where were thirteen ships, but none of them of any great strength.
Low hoisted the black flag, assuring them that if they made any
resistance they should have no quarter; and manning their boat, the
pirates took possession of every one of them, which they plundered
and converted to their own use. They then put on board a schooner
ten guns and fifty men, named her the Fancy, and Low himself went
on board of her, while Charles Harris was constituted captain of
the brigantine. They also constrained a few of the men to join
them, and sign their articles.</p>
<p>After an unsuccessful pursuit of two sloops from Boston, they
steered for the Leeward Islands, but in their way were overtaken by
a terrible hurricane. The search for plunder gave place to the most
vigorous exertion to save themselves. On board the brigantine, all
hands were at work both day and night; they were under the
necessity of throwing overboard six of her guns, and all the
weighty provisions. In the storm, the two vessels were separated,
and it was some time before they again saw each other.</p>
<p>After the storm, Low went into a small island west of the
Carribbees, refitted his vessels, and got provision for them in
exchange of goods. As soon as the brigantine was ready for sea,
they went on a cruise until the Fancy should be prepared, and
during that cruise, met with a vessel which had lost all her masts
in the storm, which they plundered of goods to the value of
1000<i>l</i>. and returned to the island. When the Fancy was ready
to sail, a council was held what course they should next steer.
They followed the advice of the captain, who thought it not safe to
cruise any longer to the leeward, lest they should fall in with any
of the men-of-war that cruised upon that coast, so they sailed for
the Azores.</p>
<p>The good fortune of Low was now singular; in his way thither he
captured a French ship of 34 guns, and carried her along with him.
Then entering St. Michael's roads, he captured seven sail,
threatening with instant death all who dared to oppose him. Thus,
by inspiring terror, without firing a single gun, he became master
of all that property. Being in want of water and fresh provisions,
Low sent to the governor demanding a supply, upon condition of
releasing the ships he had taken, otherwise he would commit them to
the flames. The request was instantly complied with, and six of the
vessels were restored. But a French vessel being among them, they
emptied her of guns and all her men except the cook, who, they
said, being a greasy fellow, would fry well; they accordingly bound
the unfortunate man to the mast, and set the ship on fire.</p>
<p>The next who fell in their way was Captain Carter, in the Wright
galley; who, because he showed some inclination to defend himself,
was cut and mangled in a barbarous manner. There were also two
Portuguese friars, whom they tied to the foremast, and several
times let them down before they were dead, merely to gratify their
own ferocious dispositions. Meanwhile, another Portuguese,
beholding this cruel scene, expressed some sorrow in his
countenance, upon which one of the wretches said he did not like
his looks, and so giving him a stroke across the body with his
cutlass, he fell upon the spot. Another of the miscreants, aiming a
blow at a prisoner, missed his aim, and struck Low upon the under
jaw. The surgeon was called, and stitched up the wound; but Low
finding fault with the operation, the surgeon gave him a blow which
broke all the stiches, and left him to sew them himself. After he
had plundered this vessel, some of them were for burning her, as
they had done the Frenchman; but instead of that, they cut her
cables, rigging, and sails to pieces, and sent her adrift to the
mercy of the waves.</p>
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<h4><i>The Cruelties practised by Captain Low.</i></h4>
They next sailed for the island of Madeira, and took up a fishing
boat with two old men and a boy. They detained one of them, and
sent the other on shore with a flag of truce, requesting the
governor to send them a boat of water, else they would hang the
other man at the yard arm. The water was sent, and the man
dismissed.
<p>They next sailed for the Canary Islands, and there took several
vessels; and being informed that two small galleys were daily
expected, the sloop was manned and sent in quest of them. They,
however, missing their prey, and being in great want of provision,
went into St. Michael's in the character of traders, and being
discovered, were apprehended, and the whole crew conducted to the
castle, and treated according to their merits.</p>
<p>Meanwhile, Low's ship was overset upon the careen and lost, so
that, having only the Fancy schooner remaining, they all, to the
number of a hundred, went on board her, and set sail in search of
new spoils. They soon met a rich Portuguese vessel, and after some
resistance captured her. Low tortured the men to constrain them to
inform him where they had hid their treasures. He accordingly
discovered that, during the chase, the captain had hung a bag with
eleven thousand moidores out of the cabin window, and that, when
they were taken, he had cut the rope, and allowed it to fall into
the sea. Upon this intelligence, Low raved and stormed like a fury,
ordered the captain's lips to be cut off and broiled before his
eyes, then murdered him and all his crew.</p>
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<h4>
<i>
The Captain of the Portuguese Ship cutting away the Bag of
Moidores.
</i>
</h4>
After this bloody action, the miscreants steered northward, and in
their course seized several vessels, one of which they burned, and
plundering the rest, allowed them to proceed. Having cleaned in one
of the islands, they then sailed for the bay of Honduras. They met
a Spaniard coming out of the bay, which had captured five
Englishmen and a pink, plundered them, and brought away the masters
prisoners. Low hoisted Spanish colors, but, when he came near, hung
out the black flag, and the Spaniard was seized without resistance.
Upon finding the masters of the English vessels in the hold, and
seeing English goods on board, a consultation was held, when it was
determined to put all the Spaniards to the sword. This was scarcely
resolved upon, when they commenced with every species of weapons to
massacre every man, and some flying from their merciless hands into
the waves, a canoe was sent in pursuit of those who endeavored to
swim on shore. They next plundered the Spanish vessel, restored the
English masters to their respective vessels, and set the Spaniard
on fire.
<p>Low's next cruise was between the Leeward Islands and the main
land, where, in a continued course of prosperity, he successively
captured no less than nineteen ships of different sizes, and in
general treated their crews with a barbarity unequalled even among
pirates. But it happened that the Greyhound, of twenty guns and one
hundred and twenty men, was cruising upon that coast. Informed of
the mischief these miscreants had done, the Greyhound went in
search of them. Supposing they had discovered a prize, Low and his
crew pursued them, and the Greyhound, allowing them to run after
her until all things were ready to engage, turned upon the two
sloops.</p>
<p>One of these sloops was called the Fancy, and commanded by Low
himself, and the other the Ranger, commanded by Harris; both
hoisted their piratical colors, and fired each a gun. When the
Greyhound came within musket shot, she hauled up her mainsail, and
clapped close upon a wind, to keep the pirates from running to
leeward, and then engaged. But when the rogues found whom they had
to deal with, they edged away under the man-of-war's stern, and the
Greyhound standing after them, they made a running fight for about
two hours; but little wind happening, the sloops gained from her,
by the help of their oars; upon which the Greyhound left off
firing, turned all hands to her own oars, and at three in the
afternoon came up with them. The pirates hauled upon a wind to
receive the man-of-war, and the fight was immediately renewed, with
a brisk fire on both sides, till the Ranger's mainyard was shot
down. Under these circumstances, Low abandoned her to the enemy,
and fled.</p>
<p>The conduct of Low was surprising in this adventure, because his
reputed courage and boldness had hitherto so possessed the minds of
all people, that he became a terror even to his own men; but his
behaviour throughout this whole action showed him to be a base
cowardly villain; for had Low's sloop fought half so briskly as
Harris' had done (as they were under a solemn oath to do,) the
man-of-war, in the opinion of some present, could never have hurt
them.</p>
<p>Nothing, however, could lessen the fury, or reform the manners,
of that obdurate crew. Their narrow escape had no good effect upon
them, and with redoubled violence they renewed their depredations
and cruelties. The next vessel they captured, was eighty miles from
land. They used the master with the most wanton cruelty, then shot
him dead, and forced the crew into the boat with a compass, a
little water, and a few biscuits, and left them to the mercy of the
waves; they, however, beyond all expectation, got safe to
shore.</p>
<p>Low proceeded in his villainous career with too fatal success.
Unsatisfied with satiating their avarice and walking the common
path of wickedness, those inhuman wretches, like to Satan himself,
made mischief their sport, cruelty their delight, and the ruin and
murder of their fellow men their constant employment. Of all the
piratical crews belonging to the English nation, none ever equalled
Low in barbarity. Their mirth and their anger had the same effect.
They murdered a man from good humor, as well as from anger and
passion. Their ferocious disposition seemed only to delight in
cries, groans, and lamentations. One day Low having captured
Captain Graves, a Virginia man, took a bowl of punch in his hand,
and said, "Captain, here's half this to you." The poor gentleman
was too much touched with his misfortunes to be in a humor for
drinking, he therefore modestly excused himself. Upon this Low
cocked and presented a pistol in the one hand, and his bowl in the
other, saying, "Either take the one or the other."</p>
<p>Low next captured a vessel called the Christmas, mounted her
with thirty-four guns, went on board her himself, assumed the title
of admiral, and hoisted the black flag. His next prize was a
brigantine half manned with Portuguese, and half with English. The
former he hanged, and the latter he thrust into their boat and
dismissed, while he set fire to the vessel. The success of Low was
unequalled, as well as his cruelty; and during a long period he
continued to pursue his wicked course with impunity.</p>
<p>All wickedness comes to an end and Low's crew at last rose
against him and he was thrown into a boat without provisions and
abandoned to his fate. This was because Low murdered the
quarter-master while he lay asleep. Not long after he was cast
adrift a French vessel happened along and took him into Martinico,
and after a quick trial by the authorities he received short shift
on a gallows erected for his benefit.</p>
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<h4><i>Low presenting a Pistol and Bowl of Punch.</i></h4>
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