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<h2 class="chapter"><SPAN name="Chapter_XXVIII" id="Chapter_XXVIII"></SPAN>Chapter XXVIII</h2>
<h2>The Story of Two Women Pirates</h2>
<p>The history of the world gives us many instances
of women who have taken the parts
of men, almost always acquitting themselves
with as much credit as if they had really
belonged to the male sex, and, in our modern days,
these instances are becoming more frequent than
ever before. Joan of Arc put on a suit of armor
and bravely led an army, and there have been many
other fighting women who made a reputation for
themselves; but it is very seldom that we hear of a
woman who became a pirate. There were, however,
two women pirates who made themselves very
well known on our coast.</p>
<p>The most famous of these women pirates was
named Mary Reed. Her father was an English
captain of a trading vessel, and her mother sailed
with him. This mother had had an elder child, a
son, and she also had a mother-in-law in England
from whom she expected great things for her little
boy. But the boy died, and Mrs. Reed, being
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afraid that her mother-in-law would not be willing
to leave any property to a girl, determined to play a
little trick, and make believe that her second child
was also a boy.</p>
<p>Consequently, as soon as the little girl, who, from
her birth had been called Mary by her father and
mother, was old enough to leave off baby clothes,
she put on boy's clothes, and when the family returned
to England a nice little boy appeared before
his grandmother; but all this deception amounted
to nothing, for the old lady died without leaving
anything to the pretended boy. Mary's mother
believed that her child would get along better in the
world as a boy than she would as a girl, and therefore
she still dressed her in masculine clothes, and
put her out to service as a foot-boy, or one of those
youngsters who now go by the name of "Buttons."</p>
<p>But Mary did not fancy blacking boots and running
errands. She was very well satisfied to be a
boy, but she wanted to live the kind of a boy's life
which would please her fancy, and as she thought
life on the ocean wave would suit her very well, she
ran away from her employer's house and enlisted on
board a man-of-war as a powder monkey.</p>
<p>After a short time, Mary found that the ocean
was not all that she expected it to be, and when she
had grown up so that she looked like a good strapping
fellow, she ran away from the man-of-war when
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it was in an English port, and went to Flanders,
and there she thought she would try something new,
and see whether or not she would like a soldier's
life better than that of a sailor. She enlisted in a
regiment of foot, and in the course of time she
became a very good soldier and took part in several
battles, firing her musket and charging with her
bayonet as well as any of the men beside her.</p>
<p>But there is a great deal of hard work connected
with infantry service, and although she was eager
for the excitement of battle with the exhilarating
smell of powder and the cheering shouts of her
fellow-soldiers, Mary did not fancy tramping on
long marches, carrying her heavy musket and knapsack.
She got herself changed into a regiment of
cavalry, and here, mounted upon a horse, with the
encumbrances she disliked to carry comfortably
strapped behind her, Mary felt much more at ease,
and much better satisfied. But she was not destined
to achieve fame as a dashing cavalry man with foaming
steed and flashing sabre. One of her comrades
was a very prepossessing young fellow, and Mary
fell in love with him, and when she told him she
was not really a cavalry man but a cavalry woman,
he returned her affection, and the two agreed that
they would quit the army, and set up domestic life
as quiet civilians. They were married, and went
into the tavern-keeping business. They were both
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fond of horses, and did not wish to sever all connection
with the method of life they had just given
up, and so they called their little inn the Three
Horse Shoes, and were always glad when any one
of their customers came riding up to their stables,
instead of simply walking in their door.</p>
<p>But this domestic life did not last very long.
Mary's husband died, and, not wishing to keep a
tavern by herself, she again put on the dress of a
man and enlisted as a soldier. But her military
experience did not satisfy her, and after all she
believed that she liked the sea better than the land,
and again she shipped as a sailor on a vessel bound
for the West Indies.</p>
<p>Now Mary's desire for change and variety seemed
likely to be fully satisfied. The ship was taken by
English pirates, and as she was English and looked
as if she would make a good freebooter, they compelled
her to join them, and thus it was that she got
her first idea of a pirate's life. When this company
disbanded, she went to New Providence and enlisted
on a privateer, but, as was very common on such vessels
commissioned to perform acts of legal piracy, the
crew soon determined that illegal piracy was much
preferable, so they hoisted the black flag, and began
to scourge the seas.</p>
<p>Mary Reed was now a regular pirate, with a cutlass,
pistol, and every outward appearance of a daring
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sea-robber, except that she wore no bristling
beard, but as her face was sunburned and seamed
by the weather, she looked mannish enough to
frighten the senses out of any unfortunate trader
on whose deck she bounded in company with her
shouting, hairy-faced companions. It is told of her
that she did not fancy the life of a pirate, but she
seemed to believe in the principle of whatever is
worth doing is worth doing well; she was as ready
with her cutlass and her pistol as any other ocean
bandit.</p>
<p>But although Mary was a daring pirate, she was
also a woman, and again she fell in love. A very
pleasant and agreeable sailor was taken prisoner by
the crew of her ship, and Mary concluded that she
would take him as her portion of the spoils. Consequently,
at the first port they touched she became
again a woman and married him, and as they had
no other present method of livelihood he remained
with her on her ship. Mary and her husband had
no real love for a pirate's life, and they determined
to give it up as soon as possible, but the chance to
do so did not arrive. Mary had a very high regard
for her new husband, who was a quiet, amiable
man, and not at all suited to his present life, and
as he had become a pirate for the love of her, she
did everything she could to make life easy for
him.</p>
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<p>She even went so far as to fight a duel in his
place, one of the crew having insulted him, probably
thinking him a milksop who would not resent
an affront. But the latent courage of Mary's husband
instantly blazed up, and he challenged the
insulter to a duel. Although Mary thought her
husband was brave enough to fight anybody, she
thought that perhaps, in some ways, he was a milksop
and did not understand the use of arms nearly
as well as she did. Therefore, she made him stay on
board the ship while she went to a little island near
where they were anchored and fought the duel with
sword and pistol. The man pirate and the woman
pirate now went savagely to work, and it was not
long before the man pirate lay dead upon the sand,
while Mary returned to an admiring crew and a
grateful husband.</p>
<p>During her piratical career Mary fell in with another
woman pirate, Anne Bonny, by name, and these
women, being perhaps the only two of their kind,
became close friends. Anne came of a good family.
She was the daughter of an Irish lawyer, who went
to Carolina and became a planter, and there the
little girl grew up. When her mother died she
kept the house, but her disposition was very much
more masculine than feminine. She was very quick-tempered
and easily enraged, and it is told of her
that when an Englishwoman, who was working as
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a servant in her father's house, had irritated Anne
by some carelessness or impertinence, that hot-tempered
young woman sprang upon her and
stabbed her with a carving-knife.</p>
<p>It is not surprising that Anne soon showed a
dislike for the humdrum life on a plantation, and
meeting with a young sailor, who owned nothing
in the world but the becoming clothes he wore, she
married him. Thereupon her father, who seems
to have been as hot-headed as his daughter, promptly
turned her out of doors. The fiery Anne was glad
enough to adopt her husband's life, and she went to
sea with him, sailing to New Providence. There
she was thrown into an entirely new circle of society.
Pirates were in the habit of congregating at this
place, and Anne was greatly delighted with the
company of these daring, dashing sea-robbers, of
whose exploits she had so often heard. The more
she associated with the pirates, the less she cared for
the plain, stupid sailors, who were content with the
merchant service, and she finally deserted her husband
and married a Captain Rackham, one of the
most attractive and dashing pirates of the day.</p>
<p>Anne went on board the ship of her pirate husband,
and as she was sure his profession would
exactly suit her wild and impetuous nature, she
determined also to become a pirate. She put on
man's clothes, girded to her side a cutlass, and hung
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pistols in her belt. During many voyages Anne
sailed with Captain Rackham, and wherever there
was pirate's work to do, she was on deck to do it.
At last the gallant captain came to grief. He was
captured and condemned to death. Now there was
an opportunity for Anne's nature to assert itself,
and it did, but it was a very different sort of nature
from that of Mary Reed. Just before his execution
Anne was admitted to see her husband, but
instead of offering to do anything that might comfort
him or palliate his dreadful misfortune, she
simply stood and contemptuously glared at him.
She was sorry, she said, to see him in such a predicament,
but she told him plainly that if he had
had the courage to fight like a man, he would not
then be waiting to be hung like a dog, and with
that she walked away and left him.</p>
<p>On the occasion when Captain Rackham had
been captured, Mary Reed and her husband were
on board his ship, and there was, perhaps, some
reason for Anne's denunciation of the cowardice
of Captain Rackham. As has been said, the two
women were good friends and great fighters, and
when they found the vessel engaged in a fight with
a man-of-war, they stood together upon the deck
and boldly fought, although the rest of the crew,
and even the captain himself, were so discouraged
by the heavy fire which was brought to bear on
them, that they had retreated to the hold.</p>
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<p>Mary and Anne were so disgusted at this exhibition
of cowardice, that they rushed to the hatchways
and shouted to their dastardly companions to come
up and help defend the ship, and when their entreaties
were disregarded they were so enraged that
they fired down into the hold, killing one of the
frightened pirates and wounding several others.
But their ship was taken, and Mary and Anne, in
company with all the pirates who had been left alive,
were put in irons and carried to England.</p>
<p>When she was in prison, Mary declared that she
and her husband had firmly intended to give up
piracy and become private citizens. But when she
was put on trial, the accounts of her deeds had
a great deal more effect than her words upon her
judges, and she was condemned to be executed.
She was saved, however, from this fate by a fever
of which she died soon after her conviction.</p>
<p>The impetuous Anne was also condemned, but
the course of justice is often very curious and difficult
to understand, and this hard-hearted and sanguinary
woman was reprieved and finally pardoned.
Whether or not she continued to disport herself
as a man we do not know, but it is certain that she
was the last of the female pirates.</p>
<p>There are a great many things which women can
do as well as men, and there are many professions
and lines of work from which they have been long
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debarred, and for which they are most admirably
adapted, but it seems to me that piracy is not one
of them. It is said that a woman's nature is apt to
carry her too far, and I have never heard of any man
pirate who would allow himself to become so enraged
against the cowardice of his companions that
he would deliberately fire down into the hold of
a vessel containing his wife and a crowd of his
former associates.</p>
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