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<h2 class="chapter"><SPAN name="Chapter_II" id="Chapter_II"></SPAN>Chapter II</h2>
<h2>Some Masters in Piracy</h2>
<p>From the very earliest days of history there
have been pirates, and it is, therefore, not at
all remarkable that, in the early days of the
history of this continent, sea-robbers should have
made themselves prominent; but the buccaneers of
America differed in many ways from those pirates
with whom the history of the old world has made
us acquainted.</p>
<p>It was very seldom that an armed vessel set out
from an European port for the express purpose of
sea-robbery in American waters. At first nearly all
the noted buccaneers were traders. But the circumstances
which surrounded them in the new world
made of them pirates whose evil deeds have never
been surpassed in any part of the globe.</p>
<p>These unusual circumstances and amazing temptations
do not furnish an excuse for the exceptionally
wicked careers of the early American pirates; but
we are bound to remember these causes or we could
not understand the records of the settlement of the
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West Indies. The buccaneers were fierce and reckless
fellows who pursued their daring occupation
because it was profitable, because they had learned
to like it, and because it enabled them to wreak a
certain amount of vengeance upon the common
enemy. But we must not assume that they inaugurated
the piratical conquests and warfare which
existed so long upon our eastern seacoasts.</p>
<p>Before the buccaneers began their careers, there
had been great masters of piracy who had opened
their schools in the Caribbean Sea; and in order
that the condition of affairs in this country during
parts of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries may
be clearly understood, we will consider some of the
very earliest noted pirates of the West Indies.</p>
<p>When we begin a judicial inquiry into the condition
of our fellow-beings, we should try to be as
courteous as we can, but we must be just; consequently
a man's fame and position must not turn us
aside, when we are acting as historical investigators.</p>
<p>Therefore, we shall be bold and speak the truth,
and although we shall take off our hats and bow very
respectfully, we must still assert that Christopher
Columbus was the first who practised piracy in
American waters.</p>
<p>When he sailed with his three little ships to discover
unknown lands, he was an accredited explorer
for the court of Spain, and was bravely sailing forth
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with an honest purpose, and with the same regard
for law and justice as is possessed by any explorer
of the present day. But when he discovered some
unknown lands, rich in treasure and outside of all
legal restrictions, the views and ideas of the great
discoverer gradually changed. Being now beyond
the boundaries of civilization, he also placed himself
beyond the boundaries of civilized law. Robbery,
murder, and the destruction of property, by
the commanders of naval expeditions, who have no
warrant or commission for their conduct, is the same
as piracy, and when Columbus ceased to be a legalized
explorer, and when, against the expressed wishes,
and even the prohibitions, of the royal personages
who had sent him out on this expedition, he began
to devastate the countries he had discovered, and to
enslave and exterminate their peaceable natives, then
he became a master in piracy, from whom the buccaneers
afterward learned many a valuable lesson.</p>
<p>It is not necessary for us to enter very deeply into
the consideration of the policy of Columbus toward
the people of the islands of the West Indies. His
second voyage was nothing more than an expedition
for the sake of plunder. He had discovered gold
and other riches in the West Indies and he had
found that the people who inhabited the islands were
simple-hearted, inoffensive creatures, who did not
know how to fight and who did not want to fight.
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Therefore, it was so easy to sail his ships into the
harbors of defenceless islands, to subjugate the natives,
and to take away the products of their mines
and soil, that he commenced a veritable course of
piracy.</p>
<p>The acquisition of gold and all sorts of plunder
seemed to be the sole object of this Spanish expedition;
natives were enslaved, and subjected to
the greatest hardships, so that they died in great
numbers. At one time three hundred of them were
sent as slaves to Spain. A pack of bloodhounds,
which Columbus had brought with him for the purpose,
was used to hunt down the poor Indians when
they endeavored to escape from the hands of the
oppressors, and in every way the island of Hayti,
the principal scene of the actions of Columbus, was
treated as if its inhabitants had committed a dreadful
crime by being in possession of the wealth which
the Spaniards desired for themselves.</p>
<p>Queen Isabella was greatly opposed to these cruel
and unjust proceedings. She sent back to their
native land the slaves which Columbus had shipped
to Spain, and she gave positive orders that no more
of the inhabitants were to be enslaved, and that they
were all to be treated with moderation and kindness.
But the Atlantic is a wide ocean, and Columbus, far
away from his royal patron, paid little attention to
her wishes and commands; without going further
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into the history of this period, we will simply mention
the fact that it was on account of his alleged
atrocities that Columbus was superseded in his command,
and sent back in chains to Spain.</p>
<p>There was another noted personage of the sixteenth
century who played the part of pirate in
the new world, and thereby set a most shining example
to the buccaneers of those regions. This was
no other than Sir Francis Drake, one of England's
greatest naval commanders.</p>
<p>It is probable that Drake, when he started out in
life, was a man of very law-abiding and orderly disposition,
for he was appointed by Queen Elizabeth
a naval chaplain, and, it is said, though there is some
doubt about this, that he was subsequently vicar of
a parish. But by nature he was a sailor, and nothing
else, and after having made several voyages in
which he showed himself a good fighter, as well as
a good commander, he undertook, in 1572, an expedition
against the Spanish settlements in the West
Indies, for which he had no legal warrant whatever.</p>
<p>Spain was not at war with England, and when
Drake sailed with four small ships into the port of
the little town of Nombre de Dios in the middle
of the night, the inhabitants of the town were as
much astonished as the people of Perth Amboy
would be if four armed vessels were to steam into
Raritan Bay, and endeavor to take possession of the
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town. The peaceful Spanish townspeople were not
at war with any civilized nation, and they could not
understand why bands of armed men should invade
their streets, enter the market-place, fire their calivers,
or muskets, into the air, and then sound a
trumpet loud enough to wake up everybody in the
place. Just outside of the town the invaders had
left a portion of their men, and when these heard
the trumpet in the market-place, they also fired their
guns; all this noise and hubbub so frightened the
good people of the town, that many of them jumped
from their beds, and without stopping to dress, fled
away to the mountains. But all the citizens were
not such cowards, and fourteen or fifteen of them
armed themselves and went out to defend their town
from the unknown invaders.</p>
<p>Beginners in any trade or profession, whether it
be the playing of the piano, the painting of pictures,
or the pursuit of piracy, are often timid and distrustful
of themselves; so it happened on this occasion
with Francis Drake and his men, who were
merely amateur pirates, and showed very plainly
that they did not yet understand their business.</p>
<p>When the fifteen Spanish citizens came into the
market-place and found there the little body of
armed Englishmen, they immediately fired upon
them, not knowing or caring who they were. This
brave resistance seems to have frightened Drake
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and his men almost as much as their trumpets and
guns had frightened the citizens, and the English
immediately retreated from the town. When they
reached the place where they had left the rest of
their party, they found that these had already run
away, and taken to the boats. Consequently Drake
and his brave men were obliged to take off some of
their clothes and to wade out to the little ships. The
Englishmen secured no booty whatever, and killed
only one Spaniard, who was a man who had been
looking out of a window to see what was the matter.</p>
<p>Whether or not Drake's conscience had anything
to do with the bungling manner in which he made
this first attempt at piracy, we cannot say, but he
soon gave his conscience a holiday, and undertook
some very successful robbing enterprises. He received
information from some natives, that a train
of mules was coming across the Isthmus of Panama
loaded with gold and silver bullion, and guarded
only by their drivers; for the merchants who owned
all this treasure had no idea that there was any one in
that part of the world who would commit a robbery
upon them. But Drake and his men soon proved
that they could hold up a train of mules as easily as
some of the masked robbers in our western country
hold up a train of cars. All the gold was taken,
but the silver was too heavy for the amateur pirates
to carry.</p>
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<p>Two days after that, Drake and his men came to
a place called "The House of Crosses," where they
killed five or six peaceable merchants, but were
greatly disappointed to find no gold, although the
house was full of rich merchandise of various kinds.
As his men had no means of carrying away heavy
goods, he burned up the house and all its contents
and went to his ships, and sailed away with the
treasure he had already obtained.</p>
<p>Whatever this gallant ex-chaplain now thought
of himself, he was considered by the Spaniards as an
out-and-out pirate, and in this opinion they were
quite correct. During his great voyage around the
world, which he began in 1577, he came down upon
the Spanish-American settlements like a storm from
the sea. He attacked towns, carried off treasure,
captured merchant-vessels,—and in fact showed
himself to be a thoroughbred and accomplished
pirate of the first class.</p>
<p>It was in consequence of the rich plunder with
which his ships were now loaded, that he made his
voyage around the world. He was afraid to go
back the way he came, for fear of capture, and so,
having passed the Straits of Magellan, and having
failed to find a way out of the Pacific in the neighborhood
of California, he doubled the Cape of Good
Hope, and sailed along the western coast of Africa
to European waters.</p>
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<p>This grand piratical expedition excited great indignation
in Spain, which country was still at peace
with England, and even in England there were
influential people who counselled the Queen that it
would be wise and prudent to disavow Drake's
actions, and compel him to restore to Spain the
booty he had taken from his subjects. But Queen
Elizabeth was not the woman to do that sort of
thing. She liked brave men and brave deeds, and
she was proud of Drake. Therefore, instead of
punishing him, she honored him, and went to take
dinner with him on board his ship, which lay at
Deptford.</p>
<p>So Columbus does not stand alone as a grand
master of piracy. The famous Sir Francis Drake,
who became vice-admiral of the fleet which defeated
the Spanish Armada, was a worthy companion of
the great Genoese.</p>
<p>These notable instances have been mentioned
because it would be unjust to take up the history
of those resolute traders who sailed from England,
France, and Holland, to the distant waters of the
western world for the purpose of legitimate enterprise
and commerce, and who afterwards became
thorough-going pirates, without trying to make it
clear that they had shining examples for their notable
careers.</p>
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