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Herbert, Henry William, 1807-1858 [1843], Ringwood the rover: a tale of Florida (William H. Graham, Philadelphia) [word count] [eaf140].
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Front matter Covers, Edges and Spine

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Preliminaries

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Title Page RINGWOOD THE ROVER,
A TALE OF FLORIDA.


Our plough the galley, and our steeds the breeze—
Our harvest-field the broad and bounding seas—
We reap the golden crop from zone to zone,
Our birthright all that slaves and dastards own.
PHILADELPHIA:
WILLIAM H. GRAHAM, 98 CHESNUT STREET
1843.

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Acknowledgment

Entered according to act of Congress, in the year 1841, by
G. R. GRAHAM,
In the office of the Clerk of the Eastern District of Pennsylvania.

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TO THE PUBLIC.

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The history of the Buccaneers abounds with perilous enterprises and
romantic adventures, which afford a field for the highest powers of the
novelist; but hitherto American authors have avoided this fertile ground.
In “Ringwood the Rover” the writer has sought to give a picture of the
nobler class, as well as to describe some of the daring undertakings of these
free rovers of the seas.

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Main text

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CHAPTER I.

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Our plough the galley, and our steeds the breeze—
Our harvest-field the broad and bounding seas—
We reap the golden crop from zone to zone,
Our birthright all that slaves and dastards own.

The earliest dawning of a lovely summer day,
in the year 1659, was pouring its sweet light, unclouded
yet with that fierce heat which renders
almost insupportable the noontide hours, over the
forests which encircled, with a belt of ever-during
verdure, the Spanish city of St. Augustine. It
was already in those days a place of much importance,
with nunneries, and steepled churches,
and terraced dwellings, with white walls and jalousies
peeping from out the foliage of dark orange
groves, and all those beautiful peculiarities of
semi-Moorish taste, which lend so much of poetry
and of romance to the old towns of Spain. It had its
flanking walls, its ditches, and its palisades, presenting
their impregnable resistance to the fierce
and wily Indian, whom the relentless cruelty of
the white colonist, of whatsover nation, had at
length goaded into systematic and continual hostility;
in seaward bastions, with water-gate and
demilune, mounted with heavy cannon, and garrisoned
by old Castilians, under an officer who
bore the style of royal governor.

Such was the aspect of the place at the conclusion
of the first century which had elapsed since
its foundation; nurtured into undue maturity by
the stern bigotry and energetic enterprise of that
land, which had filled the southern continent with
giant-cities, over whose ramparts floated its proud
motto of Plus Ultre, making every spot whereon
its sons had set a foot by massacre and bloodshed
and drained from El Dorado—as they justly termed
it—these vast but fatal treasures, which raised it
for a little while above all nations of the earth,
only to plunge it in the end into effeminacy and
ruin and effete barbarism.

The heavy dews, as they were exhaled by the
rising day god, teemed with the incense of unnumbered
perfumes wafted from the ten thousand vegetable
wonders which had given name to that
peninsula, wherein credulity, insatiate of all that
nature had bestowed with profuse bounty, had
placed the seat of all those monstrous fictions
which alchemists had palmed upon their dupes,
until they brought themselves to deem them real.
The land-breeze swept far seaward the rich odors
from the orange groves, and the vast forests
whence gleamed frequently the snowy chalices of
the superb magnolia, and the dense star-like blossoms
of the flowering dogwood, and colored the
azure waters of the Gulf into a thousand tiny
wavelets, which sparkled with innumerable smiles
to the bright heaven, while the thrilling and prolonged
notes of the emulous mocking-birds—
nightingales of the west, with scarce inferior
song—made every thing resound with their rich
liquid melody. On earth—on ocean—and in the
cloudless ether all was calm, lovely, peaceful—
but on the bastions of the town there was the din
of arms, the dissonant harsh clang of mingled
voices, the hurrying to and fro of soldiery, the
long roll of the drum beating to arms in haste,
blent with the piercing strain of trumpets, and the
continuous peal of bells, rung backward, as it
seemed, in token of dismay and danger.

Beneath the yellow flag with its tri-castled
blazonry, surrounded by a group of noble-looking
men, clad for the most part in the half-armor of
the day, with much of waving plumage, rich lace,
and fair embroidery, stood the governor, Juan Melendez
de Aviles, descendant of that Pedro, of the
same noble name, who, by an exertion of both
skill and valor, which, had they not been

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tarnished by the most fiendish cruelty, would have
been deemed heroical, won for the second Philip
that fair province from the French Huguenots of
Coligny. The eyes of all that little group were
intently fixed upon the sea, from which it would
appear the apprehended danger—if apprehended
danger it were, that gave rise to those takens of
surprise and prepartion—was most to be expected;
and in the visages of all, an evident expression of
anxiety and doubt was marked, in its least doubtful
character. But in the face of no one there,
were there such signs of perturbation and dismay,
as in that of the governor. He was a man of large
and heavy build, a veteran of many a bloody war,
with limbs which, although deprived somewhat
of agility and lightness by the unsparing hand of
time, were cast in a mould of iron; his features
prominent, bold, and haughty, with a world of
iron resolution in the firmly-compressed mouth
and massive jaw, and a glance of intolerable fire
in the dark eye; and his bearing, such as became
a cavalier to whom the camp and court had been
alike familiar from his first boyhood. But now
his rich dress was in disarray; a leathern shoulderbelt
with an immense two-handed sword attached
to it, and a display of cumbersome and ill-wrought
pistols thrust hastily into a broad buff-girdle, assorted
illy with a fair garb of courtly fashion; his
long hair, once as black as jet, but now discolored
with full many a streak of wintry gray, hung in
disordered masses over his broad brow, lank, and
uncurled, and graceless—and on his brow the perspiration
stood in drops, like bubbles on the bosom
of some turbid stream—and the deep olive tints
of his complexion were an unnatural and ghastly
hue—and, as he grasped a powerful perspectiveglass
with which he ever and anon swept the horizon,
his fingers might be seen to work in quick
convulsive twitches, as though they would have
bedded themselves into the polished brass.

“Nothing!” he said, after a long and wistful
gaze, “I can see nothing seaward. Yet right
sure am I, that those sounds were of far-distant
ordnance. It is the twelfth too of the month, and
long ere this, the caravel we were advised of
should have been safe in harbor. Hark! hark!
heard ye not then,” he cried, “heard ye not that
dull roar to the eastward? Pedro, Gutierrez,
hearken—what say ye, cavaliers, is't not the voice
of ordnance?”

“Past doubt, it is,” replied the elder of the
gentlemen he had addressed, “and heavy ordnance
too.”

“And lo! a sail!” exclaimed the other, who
had directed his glass instantly toward the quarter
whence the sounds proceeded, “I marvel how
we saw her not before. Here! here, your Excel
lency! here! bring you palmetto in the range of
the east angle of the demilune, and you will catch
her! Now, by St. Jago, I can see her to the
courses; three tiers of wide-spread canvas!”

“I have her now,” replied Melendez, thoughtfully,
“I have her now. 'Tis she; it is El
Santo Espiritu, past doubt; but wherefore was
she firing? Pray heaven, these cursed English,
these infernal rovers, be not upon her track!”

“I fear me much it is so,” answered Gutierrez.
“I fear me much it is so; for ever and anon, I
fancy I catch glimpses, as they rise upon the
waves, of smaller sails behind, and further yet to
the eastward. Lo! now, in range with you skiff
upon the beach—there! it has sunk again—and
now, again, I catch it!”

“Ay! and again she fires! pray heaven she
have the heels of them; once under our guns, she
were in safety from any armament which they can
bring against her!”

Meanwhile the vessel, which had been first
seen hull-down in the far offing, was rising rapidly
as she drew near, not having met as yet the
counter-influence of the land-breeze—but scarce
less rapidly rose, one by one, the smaller barques,
which had at first escaped the notice of the eager
and excited watchers; until five low and rakish
craft, with long yard-arms and lateen sails, might
be distinctly seen in chase of the tall frigate.—
One somewhat larger than the rest, three-masted,
but of the same taunt and picarooning build, was
now so near astern, that she was able to keep up
a constant firing from her bow-guns, which the
caravel returned with her stern-chasers; though
it was evident by the rate at which she rode
the waves, staggering along with every stitch of
sail set that could draw, that she was most sincerely
anxious to avoid close action with her diminutive
antagonist. An hour had elapsed at
most since she had been at first made out; and
had there been any thing of real doubt as to the
nation of the frigate, or the character of her pursuers,
that doubt was now entirely at an end; for
at the distance of about five miles, by the aid of
strong glasses, it was not difficult to note the castled
bows and poop of the tall caravella, bristling
with culverin and demi-cannon, or to distinguish
the proud bearings of Castile upon the yellow
colors, which, in the hope perhaps of bringing
help and succor from the friendly fort and city, she
wore not only at her three mastheads, but at the
bowsprit-end, and at some six or seven other points
conspicuous in her rigging. Meanwhile, the foremost
of the chasing squadron had hoisted at her
main the snowy field of England, with the broad
bright St. George's cross, while at the peak of
each one of her long yard-arms, a blooded flag

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with the black skull and cross-bones proclaimed
her real character.

And now the agony of Juan de Melendez had
become fearfully, intensely visible; to and fro
upon the narrow esplanade above the water-gate,
with quick, uneven steps, and features haggard
with excitement, did he stalk during that long
hour; now pausing for an instant to note the progress
of the chase, and now with a despairing gesture
again resuming his distracted walk—his officers
surveying him the while with looks denoting
deep commiseration, but more of that surprise,
which must have been felt by men ignorant of the
cause of his strange gestures and bewildered mien.

“She will escape them yet! Be of good cheer,”
cried one, a young and noble-looking gallant, “be
of good cheer, your Excellency; she brings the
sea-breeze up with her right manfully!”

“Ay doth she,” cried another, “for the nonce;
but wait till she strike the counter-blast; lo! you
may see it ruffling the surface now within a mile
of her!”

“And when she doth,” exclaimed the younger
officer, “she can beat in, I trow; tack and tack,
merrily; and they can but beat after her. Why
in half an hour more she will be safe here, under
our batteries!”

“Not so! not so!” cried Juan de Melendez,
mournfully, “she never will lie here at anchor
any more, if she trust to her sails! Curse on the
fool Davila, that turns not on that paltry picaroon,
and crushes her at three broadsides before her consorts
may come up! See you not, Pedro? and
see you not, Diego, who art a mariner so skillful—
see you not that the sea-breeze even now has failed
them, and that the land-wind dies away momently?
God! God of my fathers! that we must stand
here helpless, and strike no blow in her behalf.
Yet! yet! if he would tack, while he hath way
upon her, he might engage the pirate yard-arm to
yard-arm, and so quell him; but even now he loses;
he hath lost it! His sails flap idly to the mast; it
is dead calm! Fool! fool! accursed fool! and he
hath anchored.”

“But it is no less calm for them! picaroons
though they be, and manned by devils, yet cannot
they make sail, more than the caravella!”

“Look!” was the sole reply of the well-nigh
distracted governor—“Look!”—and it needed but
a glance to show that the ill-fated frigate had now,
indeed, no hope but in the vigor of her own defence—
for low and light, and built no less for oars
than sails, the wind had scarcely left them, a half
league at the most astern of the Spaniard, ere
they had furled their lateen sails, and getting out
their sweeps, came up scarce slower than before,
crowded with men whose weapons might be
seen momentarily glancing to the broad sunshine.

“My child—great God—my child!” cried Juan
de Melendez, his pale features writhing with horrible
intensity of anguish—“Would, would that
thou wert dead, Teresa! And is all lost?—is all
lost, gentlemen? Shake not your heads, look not
so gloomily upon me; can ye devise no scheme,
no hope, no possibility—and yet how should ye,
when we have neither boat, nor even store enough
of pirogues in the bay, to bear them any succor?
Oh! would, would Heaven, that I had died, I care
not how disgracefully, so that I were but dead,
ere I had been so fettered here, to look thus helpless
on the murder of my comrades—the worse
than murder of mine innocent and lovely child!
and, thou, Don Amadis, thou who hast dared to
lift the eyes of love to her—canst thou stand statuelike
and mute, and strike no blow for her?
Canst thou endure almost to hear the shrieks, almost
to look upon the form, of her thou wouldst
have wedded, writhing in agony in the foul arms
of the licentious buccaneer! A man! a gentleman!
ha! ha! a soldier—ha! ha! ha! a man, a
gentleman, a soldier, and an old Castilian look
tamely on the violation of his bride, before the
very eyes of her insulted father!”

“Answer him not, Don Amadis”—the gray
haired veteran Pedro interposed—“answer him
not, I pray; this is sheer madness—the pardonable
madness of parental anguish! And you, Sir
Juan”—he continued, turning to the half-frantic
governor—“think you not if we were to clear
the long guns of the southern bastion, we might
yet drive those picarooning scoundrels from their
prey—methinks the caravella lies even now within
their range?”

“No! no! you but deceive yourselves—there
is no hope! none! none! Nathless we may essay
it—and see, Lavila hath slipped even now
his cables, hath got his boats out, and tows cheerily
toward us. Away there, ye knave cannoniers,
clear the long culverins, ourselves, we will go
down and point them.” And with these words,
followed by all his train, he hastily rushed down
the narrow stairway of the rampart, passed
through the sally-port, and in a moment was engaged
among the guns, with an anxiety and zeal
that for a moment quelled his mental agony.

The caravella now was but a short mile from the
seaward batteries, towed by the whole strength
of her crew, rowing with that tremendous energy
which consciousness that all is centered in his own
exertions, lends to the meanest and the feeblest
man that draws the breath of life! One half a
mile more would have ensured her safety. It was
a fearful chase! So close behind her was the best

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manned and largest of the picaroons, that now the
fire, which had been for awhile suspended, again
became hot, animated, and destructive. And now
the mizzen of the caravel came thundering, with
all its hamper, over her groaning side, encumbering
her fatally, and lessening her way through the
calm waters; while at the sight a long, loud yell
of savage exultation burst from the desperadoes
who had wrought that ruin, and penetrated even
to the ears of the appalled spectators. Hitherto
no opportunity had been given to the Spaniards on
the fortress for firing a gun in aid of their companions;
since the three-masted galley, conscious
of her advantage, kept herself by her sweeps and
oars under the stern of the tall frigate, raking her
fore and aft by a continual fire of her single gun,
a culverin of the first class, avoiding thus alike
the heavy ordnance of her broadside, and the yet
heavier metal of the batteries, which were deterred
from firing lest they should injure their own
friends! But now two other of the pirates, which,
in the chase, had made each a long circuit on
the starboard and larboard tacks, keeping as
much as possible out of the frigate's range,
having shot far ahead of her, changed suddenly
their course, putting their bows each right toward
the other, and pulling with great speed to cut her
off from her desired haven. On these, at the same
instant, opened the frigate's fire, gun after gun
from both broadsides, a fierce incessant cannonade!
and the tremendous salvo of the batteries. The
whole shores seemed to rock with the concussion;
the little air there had been heretofore, stilled
by the fearful shock, sank utterly; and, ere ten
minutes had elapsed, the surface of the water was
covered by a dense mass of volumed smoke, so
closely packed that not an eye of all who gazed
so fearfully upon the scene, could note vessel, or
boat, or any living being, though still from out
the vapory cloud the glare of the incessant cannonading
might be seen crimsoning the misty
wreaths, which every shot augmented.

“Hold! hold!” after awhile exclaimed Melendez,
“let the smoke lift, this random firing goes
for naught; let it lift, we shall see anon!”

And at his orders instantly the firing from the
battery stopped, but not for that did the dense vapors
lift at all from the still surface of the waters,
nor did the prospect brighten—fed constantly as
were those murky clouds by the continual cannonading
of the vessels, which in no degree ceased
or abated. If the sight had been anxious heretofore,
the interest appalling, when every motion of
assailant or assailed might be distinctly noticed,
what must have been the anguish now, the
agony of expectation, when the fierce work of
death was doing at their very doors, under the
muzzles of their cannon, and they might neither
see, nor judge by any sense or sign, to which
side fortune was inclining. The first sound
that attracted any near attention, was the quick
dash of oars close to the beach; and, as each
countenance was instantly directed to the joyful
echo, boat after boat of those—it needed not a
second glance to tell it—which had been last seen
towing shoreward El Santo Espiritu, loomed
through the dusky veil, and, almost as they came
in sight, grated upon the shingly beach; while
their crews, throwing down their oars, rushed
madly up the slope in desperate confusion toward
the sally-port.

“Ten thousand curses on the dogs!” fiercely
hissed Juan de Melendez through his hard-set
teeth, “they have deserted her! but not the better
shall they fare for that; level your harquebuses,
guard; depress your culverins; sweep the deserting
scoundrels from the earth!”

But to his fiery command no answer was returned,
and no obedience rendered; for during the
last pause the firing had sunk, and from the bosom
of the smoke, wild cheers and all the tumult
of heavy fight were now distinctly audible. In a
few seconds' space, the vapors gradually lightened,
so that the vessels might be seen, though
faintly, clustered together in close contact. Anon
the breeze came up again, fitful at the first and
faint, but freshening at every moment; and then,
whirled upward from the now rippling waters,
the smoky masses were swept bodily to leeward,
leaving the whole of the bright bay, the verdant
shores, and the pure heavens rejoicing in the gorgeous
sunshine.

Far in the middle of that bay lay the devoted
caravella, her sheets loosened and her canvas
flying disorderly and wild, while grappling to her
sides, her stern, her bows, the low barques of
the pirates hemmed her in, their savage crews
mounting her bulwarks in resistless numbers,
their brandished weapons glancing to the sun,
and their appalling yells deadening the hearts
of all who heard them. Unharmed by the guns
from the too distant ramparts, the light picaroons
had succeeded in cutting in between the frigate
and her boats; leaving no chance of safety to the
latter but precipitate and sudden flight, and to the
former no hope, save the precarious chances of a
pirate's mercy. Nor was it long in doubt to the
spectators what was that mercy; for ere the fight,
or massacre, more properly, upon her decks had
ceased, the wily desperadoes anchored just without
cannon shot; and as the Spanish ensign was
torn down, amid a tumult of tremendous exultation,
man after man of the defendants was hurled
overboard, so that their terror-stricken

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countrymen upon the battlements might see the waters,
ever as they fell, lashed into froth and spray by
the ferocious sharks, which, taught by their voracious
instincts the consequence of battle, seized
each one, as he touched the surface, tugging and
snapping at each other for every palpitating morsel.
And still more terrible than this the howls
of men—howls, such as nothing but the utmost
and most excruciating tortures could force from
human lips—mixed with the shriller and more
piteous shrieks of women, told that the fate of
those, who had become a prey to the disgusting
fish, was but a boon of mercy when compared
to the more awful doom of those preserved from
the first carnage to satiate the victor's love of
blood or beauty.

All day long did this fearful sight continue—all
day long were the heavens polluted, by the atrocious
deeds they were compelled to witness,
pierced by the frantic cries of those who called on
them in vain for succor or for mercy. The evening
was now drawing nigh, although, perhaps,
some three hours yet remained of daylight; when
by a simultaneous movement on the frigate's
decks, it might be judged that some new project
had been fixed on by the buccaneers. Nor were
the garrison devoid, if not of absolute fear, at
least of much anxiety; since it was evident that
their relentless enemies were in great force, not
counting less, as they might calculate—from the
known habits of the Caribbean pirates of stowing
in their long low barques as many men as possibly
could be contained in them—than seven hundred
or perhaps a thousand soldiers; more fighting-men
than which St. Augustine could not, at
that day, have turned out, though to preserve herself
from utter ruin. Nor was it contrary by any
means, or foreign to the policy of these far-dreaded
rovers to attack villages, or even forts and
cities, when in sufficient numbers to render success
probable, and when enough of plunder or of
licentious pleasure might be looked forward to,
as the result of their bold daring! A levy of the
citizens en masse was instantly resorted to, arms
were distributed, even among the slaves, whose
terrors, not inferior to those of their masters, rendered
it safe to trust them with the weapons
which, at another time, they would have probably
directed against the bosoms of the givers.
Cannon were leveled, ammunition piled by every
gun, and all precautions taken which could ensure
a desperate resistance. The pallor and the gloom
had passed away from the dark visage of Melendez,
with the uncertainty which had so terribly
distracted him. Sure as he felt himself now to
be, that she, his treasured child, the only being
on whom his stern soul doated, had endured the
last and most appalling wo that can befall a woman!
that now her agonies—her innocence—her
woes—were at an end for ever! he had again resumed
his soldierly and high demeanor! His
face was deeply flushed; and his eyebrows contracted
over the fiery orbs they shaded, till these
could scarcely have been noted but for the flashes
of fierce light which they, at times, shot forth.
His lips alone were pale and ashy, so violent was
their compression over his clenched teeth!

“Would God,” said he, when every preparation
was concluded, “would God, that they might
try it! So should they feel a father's vengeance!”

Nor did it seem improbable that his vengeful
prayer would be immediately and fully granted;
for now the pirate-barques might be observed to
put off, one by one, from the dismantled and abandoned
frigate; a single small boat only waiting,
as it would seem, for their commander. Diverging
slowly, and in opposite directions, but carefully
preserving a safe distance from the batteries, they
came to anchor each after each, the nearest about
half a mile from their prize; and as the last
swung round, the crew of the remaining skiff
were seen getting in all haste to their oars. By
aid of their naked eyes, the Spaniards now beheld
a group of officers appear upon the bulwarks of
the caravel, from which were lowered instantly
three figures, two of which were females, into the
cutter at the gangways. All, then, passed over
the ship's side, but one, who, disappearing for a
moment, through the cabin hatch, returned bearing
a lighted flambeau; deliberately then he set
on fire, in some twenty different places, the
slighter cordage and the sails of the ill-fated ship,
and ere he glided down a rope into his boat, the
forked tongues of flame might be seen darting up
the shrouds and masts, like fiery serpents; and in
a few short minutes the whole of that magnificent
and stately fabric, which had so lately walked the
waters like a thing of life, was one huge pyramid
of roaring and devouring flame. Strongly and
rapidly did that boat's crew give way, and little
time enough had they to place themselves in
safety; for fired already in the hold before they
left her, they had not traversed half the space between
her and their nearest barque, before, with
an explosion that might be heard leagues away
into the pathless forest, startling the wild beast
and the wilder Indian in his lair, and with a wide
and circling glare that for an instant made the
broad daylight pallid, the caravel blew up! A
mass of pitchy smoke settled for a short space
upon the water where she lay; and as it drifted
seaward, a few rent planks and mouldering spars
were all remaining of that noblest work of man's
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After a little while, the skiff came to under the
lee of the three-masted picaroon, and nothing
more was seen by the excited Spaniards, until a
burst of flame from a bow-port of the felucca, and
the dull roar of an unshotted gun, woke their attention.
With the report, down came the English
ensign from the fore, down came the red flag
from her peak, and in succession a broad white
field, in sign of truce and amity, waved in the
place of each. Upon the signal, each in succession
of the pirates fired a leeward gun, and hoisted
a white flag; and next, ere half an hour had
elapsed, all the boats of the squadron, twenty at
least in number, might be seen to put off from the
barques, each bearing the same amicable signal
at their bows; and after joining, which they did
at the first practicable point, to pull on steadily,
in beautiful and accurate array, toward the
shore.

Eagerly did the Spaniards watch these singular
manæuvres, and with keen scrutiny did they observe
each several barge; but it was not until
they had arrived within a short space of the
beach, that they might make out clearly the
forms or features of those who occupied them.
Nor could they as yet do this to their satisfaction,
when observing that no flag of truce was displayed
from the ramparts, they became stationary,
just without the surf, pulling a stroke or two at
times merely to hold their own, for the tide was
now fast ebbing. Scarce had they halted, before
a figure rose up in the bow of the central boat—
a powerful barge pulling with forty oars—and
waving a white flag about his head, shouted some
words, which did not reach, however, the ears for
which they were intended, although there could
be no doubt of their import.

“Shall we respond to their signal, fair Senor!”
exclaimed the veteran Diego: “I trow 'twere
best to answer them! it may be well, they hold
some of our friends to ransom!”

“No truce; no flag!” fiercely replied Melendez,
“I waited but to get them within our point
blank range! take good sight, cannoniers! look
to your matches! fi—”

“Hold! for God's sake, hold!” cried young
Don Amadis, leaping before the muzzle of the
gun, and grasping by the arm the impetuous
governor. “See you not there,” and, with the
eyes almost starting from his head, and lips apart,
and outstretched hands, he pointed to the signalboat.
“See you not it is she?”

Slowly Melendez caught his meaning—turned
his glass toward the barge, wherein the quick eye
of the youthful lover had detected the form of his
intended bride—dropped it from his unnerved and
powerless hand—and with a quick shrill cry—
“My daughter—my Teresa!” sunk helpless as a
child, into the arms of his attendants; while,
catching instantly their cue, the cannoniers flung
down their linstocks, and in three minutes' time
a flag of truce was waving in the place of Castile's
gorgeous blazonry.

CHAPTER II.

Scarcely had the white flag of truce replaced
the castled blazonry of Spain, before a loud hail
rang from boat to boat throughout the pirate squadron,
and the large forty-oared barge leading, they
pulled so swiftly shoreward, that scarce a moment
seemed to have elapsed before the whole
flotilla was battling against the heavy surf, that
tumbled in, with its deep booming roar upon the
narrow stripe of sand which lay between the bastions
and the sea—and scarce another passed before
they were beached high and dry, with their
oars shipped, in easy shot of harquebuse from water-gate
and demi-lune. A more superb and gorgeous
spectacle can hardly be imagined, than was
presented to the eye on the disembarkation of the
buccaneers; for such at that time were the profits
of their lawless and unholy trade, that not the
meanest mariner who toiled before the mast, but
had his gala suit of velvet and embroidery, his
silken hose, his arms inlaid with gold and silver,
and his rich chain of precious metal about his
brawny neck; and, as it ever was their wont
when on the eve of battle to don their most magnificent
attire, all now, from the great captain
downward to the humblest rower, were decked
in such pomp as to put to shame even the splendid
uniforms of the Castilian cavaliers. It was, however,
on the great barge that every eye was riveted;
for in her bow a group was seated, that
must have awakened the most lively interest even
in a stranger's bosom—upon a pile of cushions
covered with crimson damask, a portion evidently
of the spoil snatched from the hapless caravella,
exposed to the full glare of the burning sun, reclined
a girl of most rare loveliness. Sixteen or
seventeen years at the utmost had passed over her
fair head, but they were years of a ripe southern
climate, and so just was the rich swelling outline
of her every limb, so perfect the development of
her whole figure, that in less genial regions she
would have been taken for a woman of some four
or five-and-twenty summers. Her complexion
was of that rich and sunny tint peculiar to the
most lovely regions of the European continent;
her hair black as the raven's wing, and if it be
possible even more lustrous—although it had been
braided closely above her high pale brow—

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disordered now, and torn from its symmetrical arrangement,
flowed in disheveled masses over her neck
and shoulders; while one or two stray tresses falling
upon a bosom, that might have vied in beauty
with that of the Medicean Venus, afforded a
strange contrast by their jetty blackness, to the
almost unnatural whiteness of the pure spotless
flesh, on which they rested—for not her tresses
only, but all her vestments had been disarranged
and rent by the licentious grasp of ruffian hands;
the graceful folds of the mantilla were no longer
there, to lend their friendly shade to those sweet
modest features; the full basquina of dark silk
had been stripped violently from those lovely
limbs, now all too much disclosed through the
thin draperies of the single linen garment, which
a precarious mercy had conceded to her virgin
blushes. Nor had this wretched boon been granted
as it would seem without reluctance, perhaps
without the violent interposition of some powerful
protector; for, from the neck quite downward
to the girdle, it had been riven open by some cruel
hand, which had left on its sullied folds the distinct
score of five ensanguined fingers, and now
fell wide apart, revealing to the wanton sunbeams
one sloping ivory shoulder, and the whole of the
voluptuous bosom, which never had before been
so unveiled, even to the chaste glance of the maiden
moon. Her exquisitely rounded arms, bare
to the shoulders, were bound fast behind her back,
and the small foot, which peeped forth from below
the hem of the chemise, was not unsandaled only,
but encrusted with a deep crimson coat of human
gore, contracted from the bloody decks of the illfated
caravella.

At the feet of this lovely being, whose cheeks,
pallid with agony and terror, had long forgot to
blush in the extremity of anguish, bound like her
mistress and yet more brutally despoiled of her
apparel, crouched a negro girl, whose skin, of the
most polished jet, relieved the pale complexion of
the Spanish lady, even as a pedestal of sable marble
sets off a statue wrought in snow-white alabaster.
A little way apart from these, there lay
a slender stripling, whose unfledged chin was not
yet clothed with the first down of manhood, fettered
so torturingly hand and foot, that the blood
oozed in large broad gouts from the pores of his
swollen limbs; while a long gash on his forehead,
about which his close-curled locks were stiff with
clotted gore, and his whole person swart with
the smoke of gunpowder, and dabbled with the
blood of both himself and his assailants, showed
plainly that his desperate resistance had been the
cause of these unnatural and needless bonds.
Erect behind this miserable group, standing aloft
upon the rocking thwarts, as firmly as if his feet
were planted on the solid earth, one finger of his
right hand slightly leaning against the slender
staff, whence waved the flag of truce, towered
far above the rest, one whose commanding aspect
and proud bearing, no less than his gorgeous dress,
at once bespoke him the commander of the buccaneers.
Six feet at least in height, broad shouldered,
and deep-chested, his person, not withstanding,
was so admirably rounded, his waist so slender,
and all his limbs just in their proportions, so compact
in their easy contour, that the extraordinary
and almost Herculean power of his frame was not
observable, but on a close and accurate survey.
His lineaments were, although wearing a mingled
expression of liceatiousness, efforntery, and daring,
decidedly regular and even handsome; nor was
there any line or trait which could betoken cruelty
or fierceness. The eyes of a deep grayish
blue, although large and well-opened, were rather
sleepy than the reverse, in their ordinary aspect:
while of the mouth, that most expressive feature
of the face, the most decided character—blended
with much of firm and dauntless resolution, and
no little of contemptuous haughtiness—was passionate
voluptuousness. He wore no hair upon
his face, which, though much sunburnt, and even
swarthy from exposure to the fierce sun of the
tropics, was by no means flushed or ruddy—neither
mustache nor whisker—except one peaked
tuft upon his lower lip, many shades darker than
the sunny locks which fell in natural curls over
the collar of his doublet. The garments of this
remarkable figure were no less striking than his
personal appearance. Upon his head, set very
much to the right, so as to leave the waving ringlets
of the other side free to the breeze and sunshine,
he had a small cap of dark purple velvet,
encircled by three folds of a delicate chain, or
fanfarona—the workmanship of which, although
the metal was pure gold, surpassed in value its
material—and farther decorated by a single ostrich-feather,
near half an ell in length, of perfect
whiteness. Over a full-sleeved vest of snowy
satin, fastened at the bosom by a dozen buttons—
each one a solid pearl as large as a hazel-nut—all
linked together by a slight Venetian chain, he
wore a sleveless coat of the same velvet with his
cap, laced down the seams with gold, lined with
white silk, and decked with pendant studs of gold
filagree, and loops of bullion. White satin
breeches, and white silken hose with gold clocks,
and red-heeled shoes, completed his attire; but
round his waist was twisted a sash of purple network,
entwined with strands of gold, from which
hung at the opposite sides his basket-hilted rapier,
and a long two-edged dagger in a shark-skin scabbard—
while a broad baldric of the same

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materials, thrown over his right shoulder, supported
not less than six pistols, of rare workmanship
and finish. The rowers who propelled this powerful
barge, were all attired in velvet caps and
jerkins, with plumes, and scarfs of costly silk,
and chains of gold and jewelry—and, like their
leader, were all armed to the teeth with cutlass,
dirk and pistols; while through the whole length
of the vessel, were stacked, ready to their hands,
the heavy musquetoons or carbines of the day.
The crews of the other boats, which swept on,
all abreast, scarce an oar's length asunder, were
adorned with equal splendor; and, as they leaped
ashore, and fell into a serried line, with ported
carbines—seven hundred men in number at the
smallest calculation—a more magnificent array
can scarcely be conceived, than was drawn up
before the gaze of the dismayed and anxious
Spaniards.

After a pause of a few moments, which seemed
ages to the distracted father, who had recovered
from his swoon to a full sense of his anguish, the
splendid captain of the pirates advanced alone, a
pistol-shot in front of the well-ordered buccaneers,
followed at a respectful distance by four others,
whose dress, as sumptuous, though less tasteful
than that of their superior, betokened them the
officers of the inferior vessels. Behind these
men, again, stepped forth as many privates, two
and two, leading between them the damsel and
the stripling, who, with the negro maiden, were
now the sole survivors from above two hundred
souls, the crew and passengers of the proud frigate,
of which not now a wreck remained, to
tell how she had sailed the deep in fleet and fearless
beauty.

“Ho! Juan de Melendez”—he exclaimed,
when he had drawn so near the walls, that every
accent of his deep voice could be heard with ease—
“Juan Melendez de Aviles, I summon thee
forthwith to yield this city, and these forts, named
of St. Augustine, to our mercy!” He spoke in
pure Castilian Spanish, though with a trifling
foreign accent; so light, indeed, that but to an
ear well practiced it would not have been at all
perceptible.

“And who art thou, who summonest so boldly?”—
returned the governor, manning himself to
endure the torture, which his high sense of duty and
of honor told him he might not even hope to shun—
“and what hast thou to set forth as a reasonable
cause, why we, the armed and numerous possessors
of strong works mounting much and heavy
ordnance, well found and victualled for a six
months' siege, should yield us to a handful, without
artillery to batter our defences, or ladders to
assail our ramparts!”

“I—if it could avail thee any thing to know”—
replied the pirate, his lip writhing as he spoke,
with bitter scorn—“I am called Ringwood—Reginald
Ringwood, once of merry England—Think,
Juan Melendez, think! If thine ear may not find
something familiar in that sound—ask thy false
heart to prompt it!—and for a cause—behold these
arguments!—perchance, though thine eye may
not recognize a man whom thy tongue, scarce six
years ago, styled friend and brother, it may be
more successful in deciphering the lineaments of
this girl-like stripling!”

“And what of these?” replied the father,
struggling vainly to conceal the agonies of his
paternal terrors—“what of these innocent, defenceless
children?—or what have they to make
with the rendition of this city?”

“Innocent—and defenceless!” sneered the buccaneer,
“and knew not Juan de Aviles, any child,
ever, as innocent—as defenceless—as—nay, ten
thousand times more—lovely and more loved—to
whom, nor beauty, nor innocence, nor helplessness,
availed any thing? Now, by the great God,
Spaniard,” he continued, lashing himself as he went
on into a state of fierce and terrible excitement,
“now, by the great God, Spaniard, that shall
judge between us two, thou hast but sealed thy
doom! What, dost thou ask, have these to make
with the rendition of this city? This!—very
simply this! That if, within one hour, the city be
not rendered to our pleasure, your boy shall die
upon the beach before thine eyes, by such variety
of torture, as never yet racked human sinews!
And for the girl—thou shalt behold her undergo
things, fifty—nay! but fifty thousand times more
terrible than death protracted and made horrible
by the most lingering torments. Choose! thou
hast but one hour!”

“And what if we should render us—not that
the mere thought of such a deed is possible!”—
quivering with anguish in every iron limb, the
Spaniard answered—“what terms dost thou offer
if we should render us?”

“Life!” was the stern reply. “Life to the
soldiers of the garrison, and liberty to march out
with their arms and three rounds of munition!
We know your numbers, fair sir, far too well to
dread them! Thy son and daughter shall be restored
to thee unhurt—for the rest we will hold
the city for three days' space, using all property,
all persons therein, as our own—and at the three
days' end, we take with us whatsoe'er we list!
up anchors! and sheet topsails home! and farewell
to fair St. Augustine!”

With an unutterable air of blank dismay, the
officers upon the bastion gazed in each other's
faces. The terms were such as men could not

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endure—and the alternative scarce less appalling!

The agony, the mute, despairing, ghastly torture
depicted in every speaking picture—in the dull,
scarcely conscious air of Juan's eye, in the convulsive
writhing of his pale ashy lip, from which
the gnawing teeth, though they bit deep and keenly,
could force no drop of blood—were scarcely more
heart-rending than the tremendous bursts of passionate
and impotent phrensy, with which the
youthful lover—the noble, brave and beautiful
Don Amadis, raved with mad gestures and wild
imprecations, to and fro the ramparts!

“Beware!” after a long, awful interval, during
which he had gloated with a mixed expression of
pleasure, exultation and contempt, over the evident
misery of the man whom, as his dark words
and half-uttered hints implied, he had good cause
to hate, with that unbending and insatiate hatred,
which, if intensity may give any token whereby
to estimate duration, may survive even death itself.
“Beware, I say!” cried Ringwood, “and,
now, I speak in mercy! Beware, I say, how
thou decidest. For by my wrongs, the depth of
which none know so well as thou! and by my
love for her—which such a soul—if any soul, indeed,
be thine—so base, and sensual, and brutish—
cannot so much as fancy! and by those hopes of
vengeance, which have alone thus far sustained
me, blighted although I be, and blasted—to gain
which I have lived, and which, once gained, I will
die happy—by all these solemn things, I swear to
thee, if thou refuse my proffer, I will not bate
one jot of this which I have threatened! Nay,
more! this done—for fancy not thy paltry walls
or boasted ordnance could, for ten minutes' space
oppose, much less bear back, our onset—this done,
I say—we will be masters of your city, spite
earth, or hell, or heaven!—and, masters of it, not
one woman, from the grandame of fourscore, or
to the fresh virgin of fourteen, shall escape the
worst pollution! not one man, nor one boy, nay!
not the babe that is unborn, shall flee the sword's
edge—not one building, from God's temple, down
to the wretched negro's kennel, but shall share
the all-devouring flame! Before to-morrow's
dawn, if ye submit not to my terms, there shall
not be one living thing—there shall not be one
stone upon another, to tell the story of your ruin!
Choose, then—choose wisely—but see that ye
choose, likewise, very shortly! One hour! I
have spoken!”

“Thou speakest mere impossibilities”—replied
the miserable father—“and that full well thou
knowest! For how—were I so minded—should
I compel all these to yield their homes to conflagration—
their children to the sword—their wo
men to dishonor! Ask any thing but this, and on
the instant it shall be performed!”

Thou hast heard!”—was the stern reply—
“and I have said!”

“If thou wouldst have wealth, say the word—
our swollen treasuries would suffice to glut the
wildest avarice.”

“I have said!”—answered the pirate, fiercely,
dashing his heel with furious energy into the
yielding sand—“I have said—nor would the
gold of E1 Dorado buy thee one moment's
mercy!”

“If vengeance—I—I, Juan Melendez—I whom
you hate so deadly—I will come forth to ye unarmed—
will yield me to the utmost of your malice—
yea! I will bless your torments, so these
may return harmless!”

“And I”—exclaimed Don Amadis Ferrajo,
spinging with outstretched arms upon the battlements—
“high privilege it were to die for thee,
Teresa!”

“And I—and I—and I”—responded twenty
voices, in a breath, of the bold cavaliers, who
stood upon the bastion; and who, till now, dispirited
and cowed by the sight of anguish which
they might neither heal nor hinder, kindled to
sudden animation at the high hope of rescuing, by
their own self-devoting gallantry, those innocent
and spotless victims, blazed forth in all the lustre
of their Castilian chivalry at the proud words of
Amadis.

A low and sneering laugh was the sole answer,
for the vengeful buccaneer, as he perceived by the
increasing agitation of the Spaniards the full extent
of his advantage, waxed but the firmer and
the cooler for all their menaces and prayers.

“Monster!—ha! devil!”—shouted the fiery
Amadis, goaded by the calm and contemptuous air
of Ringwood, into a state of utter phrensy—
“devil! thou shalt not live to boast of it!”—and
snatching, as he spoke, a long-barreled harquebuse
from a sentinel beside him, he took a rapid aim,
and before any of his comrades could interpose to
hinder him—for all perceived the madness of the
action—fired it against the head of the proud
Rover.

He was a practiced and a steady marksman, was
that hot-blooded gallant: nor, had his soul's salvation
been staked upon the shot, could his aim have
been more accurate or guarded. Before the sharp
report had reached any of the tremulous spectators
who gazed, as though their all was periled
by the deed—almost before the flash had gleamed
upon their eyes—the long white plume, which
graced the cap of Ringwood, was cut sheer off
within an inch or less of his unblenching head;
and was borne away, glancing, and fluttering like

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a sea-bird's wing over the sparkling billows, by
the light western breeze. With a wild yell of
savage execration, the pirate line rushed forward.
But scarcely had they made six steps, with brandished
arms and furious gestures toward the Spanish
works, before the loud clear voice of their
commander was heard, as composed and slow, as
though he had been speaking to a comrade across
the festive board!—

“Halt! ho!—is this your discipline?—and his
right hand raised quietly aloft, without a sign of
menace—scarce even of authority—sufficed upon
the instant to arrest those hardy desperadoes, that
they stood motionless and silent as a rank of
statues.

“And this”—he said, turning his eyes, with
a scornful smile upon his lips toward the ramparts—
this is your Spanish honor—this your respect
for the white flag, which even savage and heathen
venerate! Excellent well, young man! excellent
well, and wisely was it done: 'Tis like that these
would be more merciful, seeing their captain
slaughtered here, before their face, under a flag of
truce! Had I been other than I am, this gallant
deed might have anticipated, somewhat, the time
when these shall suffer. As it is neither for fear
nor favor—neither for anger nor remorse—hath
Ringwood ever swerved—be it for good or evil—
from his word! nor can so slight a thing as thou
move his most slight resolve, more than the summer
wind can lift the earth-fast oak from its
abiding place. I said an hour—the half of it has
flown—half yet remains to ye, to sport, or grieve,
as it seems best to ye!—that past, the boy here
dies in torment. The girl lives for our pleasure,
and our scorn!”

Even before the fierce rush of the pirates had
been made, the officers around had seized the
youthful lover and disarmed him, reproaching
him unsparingly for the insane and desperate
deed to which his uncurbed passions had excited
him—“Amadis—Amadis,” cried the grayheaded
veteran Diego, “thank God upon your knees—
with your whole heart, and strength, and spirit,
thank him, that your mad effort failed. Had thy
shot struck down him, at whom it was so deadly
aimed—she, whom thou lovest, had been lost, past
hope, past redemption?”

“Young man,” exclaimed the fiery governor,
rendered more fierce than ever he was wont, by
the increase of peril to his children, by that most
inconsiderate action; “young man, hidalgo though
thou be, and belted knight of Calatrava, I swear
to thee, had that shot taken place, I would have
stripped and bound thee like a dog, and hurled
thee headlong from the bastions. As it is, if
aught ill befall my children, to thee I lay it—
see thou be ready to make full atonement:
for—”

Ere he had finished speaking, with a shrick so
tremendous, that to describe its tones, or even its
effects on those who, shaken as they were by the
dread scenes enacting in their sight, were harrowed
to the very soul by that appalling cry, were
utterly impossible—a female of some forty-five
or even fifty years, but still remarkable for matronly
majestic beauty, with her long hair disheveled,
and her large dark eyes glaring terribly,
rushed up the narrow steps, and stood unveiled,
with all her garments in wild disarray, among
that group of warriors. “My children!” she
cried—“Oh! God! God! my children!”

None spoke—none had words, or breath, or
heart, to speak to her—and she went on, mingling
the wildest, the most eloquent appeals to Heaven
for mercy and for succor, with yells and shrieks,
that made the very hair to bristle on the heads,
and the chilled blood to curdle in the veins of all
who heard her—even of the unpitying, unsparin
desperadoes, who, though they shuddered at, the
knew not what, swerved not in their fell purpose,
nor ever even dreamed of mercy. And now she
would blaspheme, and rave with execrations, such
as had scarcelv been outdone by the profanity of
the most desperate of men; calling down curses
on the heads alike of those who held her children
prepared for instant execution—of those who
could not, howsoever they might pant to do so,
strike one blow for the rescue, without ensuring
by that blow, more certainly than even now it
was decreed, their doom—and on her own head,
most of all—for that she had borne, and nursed
them at her breast, and trained them up so pure,
and beautiful, and brave—and all for such an
end!

Once Juan drew his sword—once almost gave
the word, to cast the sally-port wide open—to rush
down with pike, and harquebuse, and rapier, under
the cover of the volleying cannon—to cry “St.
Jago and God aid!”—to set all on the cast of one
desperate charge! But hope and prudence conquered.
It cannot be, he thought—his hopes suggesting
arguments which his more sober reason
would have at once discovered nothing worth—for
well did Juan Melendez know the unbending spirit,
the tameless heaven-daring pride, the dauntless
valor of the man who stood before him—not
now, as once, a wronged, and helpless exile, but
in the plenitude of power, and pride, and vengeance!
It cannot be that a mere buccaneer, a sordid,
selfish pirate would—or would be permitted
to—surrender his or his comrades' common interest
for any private vengeance, how grateful or
how sweet soever. And in these frantic hopes,

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mingled with fears, if possible more frantic, the
fatal moment passed.

“Juan!” once more exclaimed the deep sonorous
accents of the Englishman—“Juan Melendez
de Aviles, the hour I gave thee hath elapsed—
once more I ask of thee—shall these two live or
die? If thou wouldst have them live, down draw-bridge,
up portcullis, and march out, thou and thy
veterans, and thy family—for three days will we
hold the city, doing to it, and all within it, as to
us shall seem fitting—after three days will we
embark in our good ships and trouble ye no
more, here at St. Augustine—and for assurance
that we will preserve our faith with ye, myself
will be hostage in your hands—even in yours, the
deadliest of my foemen! Choose now—choose,
choose, Juan Melendez, and if thou doomest these—
these thine own flesh and blood, on whom even
I, who have such cause to hate them, scarce can
look without pity—if thou do this, say not that it
is I, but thou who art their slayer!”

The brow of Ringwood, as he spoke, grew
very pale, and his lips absolutely ashy in their
tints. Yet his eye was as bright, and even calm,
as ever; and not a muscle worked, or a nerve
quivered, in those stern features, or that stately
frame.

“Mercy!” exclaimed Melendez, stretching forth
his clasped hands toward the pirate, “mercy. As
thou mayest, one day, ask for it thyself—show
mercy!”

“As I received it, one day, at thine hands, when
I did crave it, so will I show it, Juan,” replied the
buccaneer. “Speak, now, speak out, I say! Wilt
thou yield up the town?”

“I will not,” answered Melendez very firmly,
“God help me—I will do my duty.”

“Then hear me—thy son will I torture here to
death before thy very eyes—thy daughter, if thou
move not to sally, for the time is safe—if but
the bridge be lowered, or one shot fired, I yield
her on the instant to the mercy of my crew. Lead
out the boy!”

And that pale stripling was led out before his
father's face—pale, indeed, even to ghastliness,
partly from the loss of blood, and partly from the
conscious horror of his situation. Yet he bore up
with dauntless courage, and, though a mere boy,
proved himself, in that extremity, a worthy scion
of his proud race.

“Teresa,” he said, as he left his sister's side,
“God bless thee, and farewell, and may He grant
that I may bear this agony for both. Father, let
me see that you look as bravely on my death, as
I shall bear it; unman me not by any weakness;
I would die as becomes thy son, and a Castilian.
Now, sir, I am ready.”

It was a most strange sight. The lip of Ringwood
quivered, as he looked on the brave boy, and
all the muscles of his face, which had hitherto
been as tense and cold as steel, relaxed a little,
and a tear swam in his gray eye; he was, it
seemed, on the point of yielding. But with a
mighty effort he dashed off the growing weakness.
“I, too,” he said, “painfully, although it be, and
bitter; I too have my duty.”

He cast a sign to the assistants, and they made
the boy kneel down upon the sands, and bound a
knotted whipcord closely about his temples, and
thrust between it and the flesh the stout steelmounted
stock of a ship-pistol. One strong man
seized each arm, and held him steady by the full
exertion of their united strength! Having made
that one signal, Ringwood cast no glance more
toward the hapless boy, but riveted his eagle eye,
with an intense expression of horrible exulting
pleasure, full on the father's face.

“It is done, captain,” whispered the third of
those fell satellites.

“Proceed!” replied the Rover, never removing
once his eyes from the distorted features of the
governor. “Proceed!”

And at the word, the wretch who had last
spoken, seizing the pistol by the barrel, twisted it
round and round, tightening at every strain the
knotted cord, 'till it pierced through the skin, and
flesh, and sinews, and pressed with agonizing
keenness into the solid bone itself. Manfully—
wonderfully—did that pale stripling bear the intense
anguish—anguish, the horrible extremity of
which was but too well displayed by the deep
crimson flush, which had supplanted the ghastly
whiteness of his brow—in the foam that flew
from his churning teeth, in the dark sweat that
gushed from every pore. Still he so mastered
that appalling torture, that he spoke not a word,
nor groaned, nor even murmured! Had the
fierce Rover looked but once on that boy's face,
he had forgotten all his wrongs, all his deep
hatred, in overwhelming admiration. He would
have cried—had the cry sealed his own eternal
doom—“hold! hold!” for shame if not for
mercy! But he did not look on it—for his hard
eyes were drinking in, with fearful satisfaction,
the tortures visible in the dark features of his
humbled foeman! At length the tough cord
pierced its way into the skull itself; the sightless
eyes, forced from their sockets, started out upon
the gory cheeks; one loud long yell burst from
the boy's lips, and at the self-same instant Don
Juan Melendez fell back into the arms of his
attendants, in such a paroxysm of despair and
agony, as happily deprived him of all consciousness
for hours. The yet more wretched mother

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had been dragged from the bastions, forcibly, before
that hellish scene commenced, or she had
perished at the sight!

As Ringwood saw his enemy fall senseless, as
the boy's yell pierced his scarce conscious ears,
a deep flush crossed his brow; he snatched a pistol
from his baldric, turned short upon his wretched
victim, and fired full at the head, not three
feet distant from the muzzle. One spasm—one
quick convulsive shudder—and all was over, ere
yet the echoes of the death-shot had subsided!
Was that an echo—that deep sullen roar? Again!
again! No! 'Tis the sound of ordnance! And
lo! in clear sight, on the bright horizon, four
pyramids of sail, looming up larger and more
near, as every second passes, And now what
floats above those lofty royals—what but the yellow
flag with the three castles of Castile? Hark!
to that cheer, awful, and deep, and solemn, which
rushes up to heaven from the beleaguered ramparts,
full of a thousand mingled feelings—of
gratitude for unexpected safety—of hope for
coming vengeance!

CHAPTER III.

Well was it for the buccaneers, that the wind
died away, which had brought into sight so rapidly
the Spanish caravellas; for had the four tall frigates,
which, deserted by the sea breeze, were
soon obliged to drop their anchors at the very
entrance of the bay, four miles at least from the
vessels of the pirates—been able to run in, the
small light picaroons of the Rovers, heavily
armed, although they were in proportion to their
rate and burthen, would have stood but a sorry
chance, hemmed in between the heavy batteries
of those floating castles to the seaward, and the
yet heavier cannon of the ramparts, should they
attempt to run into shoal water.

It was evident, moreover, that the newly arrived
ships were already in no small degree suspicious
of the character and intentions of the squadron
moored in shore; as appeared from the quick interchange
of signals, between the Spanish flagship,
which was the first to anchor, and her comrades.
In obedience to these signals, the four
tall vessels came to anchor, all nearly in a line,
at equal distances across the harbor, so as to render
escape difficult if not impossible—and in a
few moments afterward, in consequence of a fresh
flag shown at the mast-head, a second cable was
carried out from the stern of every frigate, and
she was warped round, till she lay broadside to
the bay with all her frowning batteries commanding
the long expanse of water, across which the
picaroons must sail exposed to their raking fire,
if they should seek to force a passage. The distance
and the apparently hopeless position of the
buccaneers preventing the Spaniards, as it would
seem, from sending their boats' crews to ascertain
their character, if not to cut them out and
capture them.

It must not be supposed that it took the keen
and practiced intellect of Ringwood so long a
time to apprehend his own position, and the intentions
of the enemy, as it has occupied us to
describe them. On the contrary, they had not
dropped their anchors, before he had envisaged
fully the extent of his own danger, and calculated
accurately the chances of effecting his escape, under
circumstances which seemed so unpromising.
Forming his men into four columns, he commanded
them to retreat by turns, one body facing
the ramparts with leveled harquebuse, and pike in
rest, while another fell back, till they had all
reached the gravelly margin of the bay. Then
judging from the movements on the walls and
above the gate, that a sally was about to be attempted,
he strode out alone, till he was within
earshot, and then shouted aloud—

“Beware!—beware how ye raise gate, or
lower bridge, or do but so much as to threaten
our retreat!—for as ye do so, by Him who knoweth
all things! the fate of your crushed clay,”—
and he pointed with a meaning smile to the dead
body of the young Melendez—“the fate of this
crushed clay shall be a lot of perfect bliss compared
with that which shall light on your sweet
daughter!” And with the words he fell back
slowly to his men, the greater part of whom were
already on board their boats, leaving the Spanairds
dispirited, and faint, and sick with hope
deferred. Within a short half hour, the whole
flotilla was in motion, dashing up the clear azure
of the peaceful bay, with hundreds of strong oars;
and ere the hour was well accomplished, each
picaroon had received its complement, had hoisted
in its boats, and lay, all hands at quarters, ready
for action.

When Ringwood reached the deck of his felucca,
ordering that his captive should be conveyed
without delay to his own private cabin, he
took to his perspective glass and gazed steadily
and long toward the Spanish caravellas, and far
beyond them toward the open sea.

“A mist!” he cried anon, after examining both
sea and sky with anxious scrutiny—“a mist,
coming in slowly from the seaward!—masthead
there!—signalize the captains of the squadron to
come aboard me here to council,”—and with the
word up went three balls to the masthead, and
bursting as they reached the summit, streamed out

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for one moment three bright contrasted signals.
Within five minutes after, a little cutter might be
seen to be launched from the side of every picaroon,
and darting toward the principal felucca, as
fast as oars could urge it through the water; yet
still the Rover swept the horizon round and round
with his telescope, minutely watching every sign
and symptom of the weather, fixing his gaze most
constantly on a point directly landward, where
just above the tree-tops one small dark cloud with
snow-white edges was visible—quite motionless—
and unconnected, as it seemed, with any mass of
vapor, the single frown of the bright laughing
heavens—the single frown, full of dread menace.
Just as the first of the small pinnaces came alongside,
his scrutiny was ended, and he closed his
glass, saying to himself with a quiet smile of
satisfaction,

“A mist forthwith from the seaward—and
when the sunset is fully passed, a hurricane and
land tornado! Ha! Master Cunninghame,” he
added as his second in command stepped on board,
a handsome, fresh complexioned, fair-haired Saxon,
“Ha! Monsieur Le Fort—welcome, good
friends and comrades—Winslow and Drake! welcome,
friends all! I have convoked you hither
to study how we may escape scot free from these
toils, that now seem set so close about us. And before
heaven!—I hold the clue, my masters. See
ye, how dark this sea-mist is now gathering? The
Spaniards must lie still till it blow over—and then
look yonder, to the bright edges of you black
cloud. Ere midnight we shall have a land tornado—
then must you Spanish lubbers slip their stern
cables, and swing head to sea; and then will we
run up to them under slight storm sails, and, it
may be, slip by them unperceived in the deep
gloom—if not engage them and force passage.—
Lo! here my masters, when I shall fire a bow gun,
hold all ready to cut or slip your cables! and
when I hoist three lanthorns on my main, then
run! You, Drake and Winslow, since that your
vessels draw least water, steer you betwixt the
headlands of the bay, on the right hand and left,
and those two outward frigates. I will steer
straight between the central two; ye, Cunninghame
and Le Fort, make good your way between
the others, on either hand of me—when ye are
all at sea, fire each a weather gun, and burn a
blue light and three rockets—then each make all
sail for the inlet, and so huzza for home! And
one word more, my friends, before we part—it
will blow sturdily, I warrant me—send down all
masts and yards—have your ships snug and easy,
with naught abroad but a small rag of head sail,
so to steer. Have out your sweeps, too,—to get
yourselves before the wind, if need be—none may
tell certainly where the tornado may strike first—
farewell, be brave and fortunate, and see ye reach
your vessels ere this fog commence; since of a
surety ye scarce will find their berths, when once
the mist gets settled. So, my friends, once more,
fare ye well!”

And with these words, accustomed long ago to
place complete reliance on the opinion of that
skillful navigator, and to yield with instinctive
readiness to his least mandate, his four commanders
entered their boats, and hurried to their several
vessels, although in truth they saw no symptoms—
even when pointed out by his unerring
judgment—of the approaching changes in the
weather which their great chief prognosticated so
decidedly. Not long was it, however, that they
doubted; if indeed it may be said that they did
doubt at all; for though they marveled, and
looked anxiously about to note some confirmation
of their leader's prophecy, they did not for a moment
presume to doubt their leader's accuracy—
for ere they had all reached their vessels, the thin
haze which had for some time floated on the extreme
horizon's edge, grew thick and heavy—and
by and by came rolling onward in damp and ponderous
masses, although no breath of air could be
discovered, by which it was urged landward; and
the whole atmosphere grew damp and watery.
Then one by one the caravellas of the enemy
were swallowed up in the dense gloom, and when
their own low rakish picaroons became so indistinct
and dim, that those which lay farthest from
the felucca of the great English buccaneers were
not reached by their officers, without much difficulty
and some hazard. Long before sunset, nothing
was visible from the deck of any one of that
small pirate squadron, but the calm surface of the
unmoved sea, and that within a circle of only some
fifty yards at the utmost, beyond which all was one
dead drowsy mass of impenetrable vapor. Yet
so well had the officers taken the bearings of the
enemy, of the headlands, and of their consort,
that there was not one of their number who was
not as fully acquainted with the position of every
thing about him, as he could have been had the
whole scene been laughing out in clear broad sunshine.

All day the crews were mustered, and toiling
at their several stations, and night was advanced
somewhat, ere all the preparations were completed;
the loftier masts sent down, the yards
housed safely, and the lighter sails unbent, the rigging
all repaired, and the masts fortified with extra
stays against the coming tempest; the guns run
out and loaded, the matches lighted, and the armed
crews at quarters; the heavy sweeps already in the
water and ready, at a word's notice, to be worked

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by powerful strong-handed gangs; the carpenter
and his stout mates, prepared with their broad
axes to sever the strong cables at a blow, and let
the gallant barks shoot seaward!

The sun had long since sunk into the waves and
the deep palpable obscure of night been added to
the gloom of the thick fog-wreaths—no stars were
in the sky, no moon, “hid in her vacant interlunar
cave,” hung forth her silver lamp in the dark
vault; for clouds, heavy and packed and solid, had
long since overspread the sky, though not a human
eye had marked them, swelling from out that one
small spot of vapor, till they had blotted out each
light of the broad empyrean, from the horizon
upward to the zenith. Midnight was near at hand—
when a deep, rumbling roar, as of ten thousand
chariots rolling upon a strong causeway, rushed
up from the landward; and, after filling the air
for some short space, sunk gradually down into a
faint, sick moan—unlike to any sound of earth, or
air, or water. It ceased; and as it did so the
sharp and ringing discharge of a long brazen culverin
burst in a sheet of flame from the lee bowport
of the Rover's galley—and scarcely had its
echoes died away, before a wide, blue sulphurous
glare seemed to rush downward bodily from the
black skies, with such a roar of thunder, crash
upon crash, and peal succeeding peal, as stunned
the sternest soul. In a moment, in the twinkling
of an eye, the misty wreaths were swept seaward
and vanished; leaving, however, the night quite
as dark as ever; and as they did so, up shot to
Ringwood's mainmast head three glittering lanthorns—
sparkled there for a moment—and were
quenched instantly, by the fierce whirling breath
of the tornado. Bearing on its mad pinions huge
limbs fresh-rent from the tall forest trees, whirling
the level surface of the calm bay into a series
of huge and snow-capped billows, and anon
sweeping away the heads of those vast waves,
and beating them down bodily into the deep, till
the whole bosom of the sea was one wide, white
expanse of scattering, hissing spray—roaring and
howling—yea! yelling in its furious might—soon
came the tropical tornado! But every cable was
cut sheer, before it struck the water, throughout
the Rover's squadron—the sweeps were out and
manned; the picaroons all underway and steering,
when the fierce blast fell on their raked spars and
scanty canvas, and drove them, like beings full of
fiery life, bounding across the waters.

When the mist cleared away, the Spanish caravellas
were descried, not by their outlines—for no
human eye could trace an outline against the
swart gloom of the sky—but by the broad glare
of the battle lanthorns, gleaming out from their
open port-holes, as they lay broadside toward the
bay, all manned and cleared for action; so that
her course was definite and clear to each one of
the picaroons.

But when the dreadful howl of the tornado
came raving through the tortured air, their stern
cables were all slipped at once, and they came
heavily round, head to sea, upon the instant; and
more line was paid out; and though they rolled
and labored fearfully, yet they rode still secure,
amid the frightful uproar.

No light was seen, no voice or sound was heard,
on deck of any one of Ringwood's squadron; as
driving with the speed of light before the raging
hurricane, they neared the lofty Spaniards—but
loud and violent was the confusion and the din
aboard the castled caravellas. Unseen and unsuspected,
leading the van of his little fleet, the Rover
rushed into the space between the central
frigates, and so rapidly did he shoot through, betwixt
those motionless and vast masses, that the
scared crews had scarcely time to note his transit;
yet did the fearful volley, which he poured forth
from each broadside, as he rushed past, plunge
fatally and fast into their clustered masts—and
when they sprung in turn to their guns, and fired
their answering salvos, the picaroon had shot already
a cable's length ahead, and the two Spanish
ships received each other's shot, thinning their
crews more fatally than had the Rover's broadside,
cutting away their rigging, piercing their castled
sides, and shearing their spars fearfully of their
dimensions. Under the cover of this disastrous
chance, Cunninghame and Le Fort passed undiscovered,
with their guns undischarged, within
half pistol shot on the outside of these same two
caravellas; and when the Rover, half a mile now
to seaward, fired his weather gun, burnt his blue
lights, and sent his rockets up kindling the murky
skies with their clear sparkles, these two responded
on the instant, with ready tokens of their
safety. Almost at the same point of time a heavy
cannonade was heard from the two outward caravellas,
and scarce ten minutes later, the two remaining
picaroons signaled their comrades through
the gloom.

Such was the desperate and daring feat, long
famous as the master deed of naval warfare
in that remote and early age, by which the English
buccaneer ran, with five petty picaroons, the
gantlet of Spain's noblest caravellas, in safety
and triumph—losing no man, no spar, no rope,
how trivial it might be soever, bearing his captive
with him, and leaving to his baffled foes sorrow,
and anguish, and despair.

Ere long the hurricane subsided, but still the
breeze blew swift, and sure, and steady—and
swiftly danced the roving barques before it. All

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night it blew, and all night long the Rover paced
the deck, but when the daylight broke over the
foaming ocean; and when he swept the free horizon
with his glass, and saw his consorts dancing
merrily behind him, and not a sail save theirs in
sight, whether of foe or stranger, he gave his deck
in charge to the next officer, and sought his private
cabin, and his unhappy captive.

CHAPTER IV.

The cabin into which, with the break of day,
Ringwood descended, was, according to invariable
custom, situate in the extreme after part of the
vessel, so as to enjoy to the utmost the advantage
afforded by the stern lights for cheerfulness and
ventilation. In its other arrangements, however,
it differed not a little from the similar apartments
in ships of war of that or indeed any other day.
All the guns, which were carried by the low light
picaroon, were on her upper deck; which, somewhat
in advance of the marine architecture of the
times, was perfectly flush from stem to stern—by
this arrangement the whole interior of the vessel
was reserved, free from the encumbrance of the
batteries, for the ascommodation of the numerous
crew, and for the needful stores of food and war
munitions, and as its sub-divisions were not, as
has been said above, conformable to ordinary practice,
it will not be superfluous to give a brief description
of their fashion and appliances.

In the first place, then, be it observed, that the
cabin companion, instead of being situate abaft the
mizen, was placed about half way betwixt that
spar and the mainmast—the stairway which it
contained opening into a narrow space, between
two musket-proof bulkheads, perforated with loopholes
and creneles for shot of harquebuse or carbine.
In the forward of these partitions, which
ran entirely across the vessel, there was no aperture
whatever, except the shot-holes above mentioned—
in the centre of the other, however,
was a low steel-clenched door-way, before which
a sentinel stood on duty with his fire-lock loaded
night and day; while a second, similarly armed,
kept guard on deck by the companion hatch. This
portal, framed, like the bulkheads, of timber so
thick as to be musket proof, gave entrance to a
narrow passage, running fore and aft, between the
armorer's and gunner's store rooms, and through
another strong door to the ward-room or apartment
of the officers, under which general term were
included all the classes superior to the private marines,
with no distinction as to warrant or commission.
This was a large, low space, occupying
the whole width, and about twenty feet of the
length of the vessel, fitted with a long table in the
centre, above which there swung from the ceiling
a compass, a chronometer, and several lamps. The
sides were occupied by berths sufficiently commodious;
while a range of lockers, covered with
cushions of rich velvet, so as to wear the semblance
of a superb divan, ran round the whole apartment.
The light was admitted, not as is usual, through a
skylight, but by a range of small glazed apartures
pierced through the sides like port-holes, and like
them provided with massive shutters, which might
be battened down in rough and stormy weather,
or in time of action. When it is added to this,
that the deck which formed the floor was covered
by a splendid carpet from the Turkish loom—that
the curtains of the berths were of the richest arras
tapestry—that two large beauffets of some costly
Indian wood were decked with gorgeous plate,
flagons and goblets, covers, and cups, and tankards,
of gold and silver, carved and embossed with the
best art of Italy's best sculptors—and that, in
wondrous contrast to the luxurious decoration of
the room, offensive weapons of every shape and
every construction, were disposed ready to meet
the hand, wherever any vacant space was left for
their arrangement—a very fair idea may be formed
of the wild blending there displayed of almost regal
pomp with warlike preparation. Thus round
the mainmast was suspended, in a fair gilded rack,
a stand of partisans with shafts of ebony, and
blades, two feet in length, of brightly polished
steel. Upon the bulkheads, at each end of the
apartment, pistols and carbines, loaded and primed,
and ready for immediate service, and Turkish yatagans,
Damascus cimiters, blades of Bilboa and
Toledo, with Malay creases, Scottish dirks, and
poniards of Italian fabric, all glittering with
golden chasings, and bright gems were placed in
fantastical devices, of stars, and suns, and crescents,
reflecting every beam of light, and almost
rivaling in splendor the luminaries in whose forms
they had been modeled. Beside this common
stock, to every column, parting the sleeping
berths, was attached a complete panoply—with
fascinet, cuirass, and buckler, pistols and boarding
axe, and broadsword of the most choice material
and construction. It was apparent at a glance,
that this, the quarter of the officers, must also be
regarded as the stronghold, the citadel as it were,
of the ship. It might perhaps be conjectured likewise,
from the arrangements, that the occupants
of this magnificent apartment were not entirely
free from some touch of jealousy, if not apprehension,
as regarded the good faith of their subordinates.
The upper bulkhead, parting the captain's
cabin from the ward-room of his officers, was, like

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the lower one, ball proof, and looped for musketry—
the door-way, as before, gave access to a
narrow vestibule or passage, arranged in this case
as the Rover's private armory, and communicating
by a hatch in the floor with the ship's magazine
and larger arm-room. From the ceiling of this
vestibule, which was not more than a yard in
width, was slung a lamp of silver with two burners;
beneath the clear broad glare of which a negro,
of gigantic stature and features singularly
handsome for his race, stalked to and fro with
shouldered carbine, and a whole armory of knives
and pistols in the broad belt that girded his white
linen caftan about his thin and sinewy flanks.
Another African, who both for bulk and comeliness,
might well have been twin-brother to the
sentinel, lay buried in deep sleep upon a velvet-covered
pallet, which occupied the whole space to
the left hand of the door-way, with all his weapons
round him. And never by day or by night
did those two grim life-guardsmen leave their appointed
post together—and singly, but at rare and
distant intervals—one sleeping while the other
watched—one feasting while the other fasted—
but both continually at hand, and ready on the
slightest signal to do their chieftain's bidding,
whether for good or evil.

On entering the last door-way, a scene of singular
beauty was presented to the eye of the
spectator. The cabin was perhaps twenty feet in
width, by half that depth, except that in the centre,
a recess of about ten feet square was formed
by the projection of two state-rooms, one on each
hand, into the chamber—this alcove, raised one
step higher than the cabin floor, was lighted by
two of the stern windows occupying its whole
breadth, and reaching almost from the ceiling to
the deck—the other two lights being cut off by
the state-rooms above mentioned. The alcove
was carpeted with a thick soft Persian rug, and
hung with seagreen velvet, fringed with broad
arabesques of gold; a divan covered with the
same stuff ran round it, while the centre was occupied
by a circular table of dark wood inlaid
with ivory and brass. Against the state-room
partitions there hung, on the one side, a set of
shelves filled with about a hundred books in costly
bindings; and on the other a portrait of a young
girl, seemingly not over seventeen years old—a
master-piece of the world's master painter, Antonio
Vandyk—with a long two-edged gold-hilted
broadsword, and a brace of large horseman's pistols,
of workmanship to match the rapier, fixed to
the panel under it, as if to guard the lovely treasure.
Upon the circular table there stood a crucifix
of gold, and a small vase of the same precious
metal, containing some choice flowers of
that tropical clime, while near them lay an open
volume of Italian poetry, a Spanish gittern, and
some manuscript music, partially covered by an
embroidered kerchief of white silk and gold.
The larger and lower portion of the cabin was
carpeted and decked with hangings of the same
color and material with those in the alcove. A
large square table filled the centre, on which lay
maps and charts, with books and instruments of
navigation. An antique cabinet of oak, with massive
ornaments of brass, a beauffet covered with
vessels of wrought gold and goblets of rock crystal,
another book-case, with perhaps two hundred
volumes, and several huge arm-chairs of oak, with
velvet cushions, completed the furniture. It must
not, however, be forgotten that here as in the
outer rooms the walls were farther decorated by
a superb collection of arms, offensive and defensive,
of every age and nation; the most costly
and most prominent of which was a complete suit
of tilting armor of blue Milan steel, all damascened
with gold, such as was worn in the fourteenth
century by every knight of name, and by
the most unhappy of the Stuarts, and some few of
his leaders even so late as the war of the English
Revolution. Such was the form and fashion of
the cabin into which, his long night-watch concluded,
Ringwood descended.

In the ward-room, as he passed, his second officer—
a young and handsome Englishman with a
fair skin, where it had not been bronzed by long
exposure to a tropical sky, laughing blue eyes,
and a profusion of light curly hair—was seated at
the table, busily engaged, with several fine looking
lads of various ages, from fourteen to twenty,
in discussing a morning meal as sumptuous as a
ship's store might furnish, with the addition of
fresh fish of several kinds, and a tureen of turtle;
which, though concocted only by the untaught
skill of the bright-skinned and clear mulatto, who
waited by the beauffet, resplendent in cap, hose,
and jerkin, of unsullied whiteness, was even thus
no despicable fare; as was attested by the frequent
applications to its dispenser, who seemed to
be in no small danger, while ministering to the
appetites of others, of losing his own breakfast.
At a smaller board, and a little way apart, the
armorer and gunner, two thick-set sturdy-looking
Britons of the Saxon race, contemning the effeminate
luxuries of potted game, broiled fish, and
turtle-soup, diluted by champagne and bordeaux,
were reveling in what they deemed the manlier
enjoyment of toasted cheese, black puddings and
fat ale. With a gay smile and some light jest,
the Rover declined the invitation of his officers to
join them at their festive board; and bowing with
an air of easy dignity passed onward, showing no

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haste or agitation in his measured tread, and
closing the door gently after him, as he entered
the small vestibule which led to his own cabin.

“You might as well have spared yourself the
trouble of that invitation, good master Falconer;”
said one of the juniors, who filled the place of
midshipmen in a more regular service—“a likely
thing it were that he should tarry here, for such
a poor temptation as meat and drink may offer,
with such a feast of charms wooing him yonder.
By St. George, well might the loveliness of that
pale, black-browed beauty overcome the virtue of
an anchorite!”

“Hold hard, there, Anson”—cried another—
“covet not thou, that which is sacred to thy betters.”

“Tush, man—tush!” answered the first speaker,
“I covet her not, by St. George; I love not
your delicate, coy damsels—better one Ariadne
fresh from the arms of the blithe wine god, than
twenty tearful Niobes. We shall have, by-and-by,
a goodly chorus of shrieks, yells, and lamentations,
I doubt not, to tell us how he prospers in
his wooings.”

But though a general burst of merriment hailed
this prophetic speech, and although every ear was
for a time on the alert to catch some indication of
the progress of events between the Rover and his
lovely captive, not a sound reached them, that
afforded any clue to their excited curiosity.

Closing the door, as has been said, gently behind
him as he left the wardroom, the Rover
turned the key, and dropped a massive bar farther
to guard against intruders.

“Let none disturb me, Pluto,” he said to the
sentinel, “on any pretext whatever—I am o'erdone
with watching, and shall betake me to my
cot till noon. And hark thee, sirrah; whatever
thou mayst hear within, HEAR IT NOT, if thou
wouldst have ears afterward, to hear withal!
Hear nothing thou, unless I call on thee—nor thy
twin devil yonder either!”

The sable functionary grinned, till he showed
his ivory teeth almost from ear to ear, as Ringwood
tutored him; and, when he had done speaking,
laid his broad hand upon his chest, and bowed
in silent acquiescence to his master's will.

Satisfied, apparently, that his attendants comprehended
and would implicitly obey his bidding,
the captain paused no longer, but entered his
apartment without farther waste of words, with
every sinew of his body strung, and every energy
of his strong mind resolved upon his savage
purpose. No clothing had been given to the
hapless prisoners, beyond the miserable relics of
their torn garments which had been spared in the
first moments of their capture; nor indeed, save
for the wants of delicacy, was any more required;
for the weather was extremely hot and sultry,
and the air of the small cabin, though all the windows
were thrown open to catch the favoring
breeze, was confined and oppressive. Little,
therefore, had it been in the power of those
wretched girls to do in aid of their offended modesty—
little, however, as it was; all, that the
utmost delicacy with their small means could
have effected, was performed. Teresa's hair had
been replaced, folded in massive wreaths about
her classic temples, decently ordered, but devoid
of the most simple ornament. Her single robe,
of thin and half transparent linen, had been arranged;
and the huge rent, which had displayed
all the voluptuous charms of her young bosom
and round ivory shoulders, repaired by such devices
as woman can alone contrive; so that the
beauties of her unrivaled form, though not concealed—
for how could one light fold of cambric
conceal the swelling outlines, the luxuriant
roundness, the unmatched symmetry of that shape,
delicately full, yet slight withal and sylphlike?—
were veiled at least from the too bold intrusion of
an unchaste eye. The stains, however, were still
there—the frightful stains of recent massacre—
the plain print of ensanguined fingers upon the
sullied surface of that virgin robe—and her small
feet and slender ankles, which might not be concealed
beneath her scanty draperies, were still
encrusted thickly with the unnatural taint of human
slaughter.

With the dark fringe of her long downcast
lashes drawn in distinct relief against a cheek as
colorless and cold as monumental marble—without
one ray of hope, one gleam of intellect, to
lighten up the dull and soulless gloom which
brooded over those glorious features, like a gray
storm-cloud overshadowing a lovely landscape—
her brow, too much oppressed to feel the agony
of its own inward aching, propped on one snowy
hand; while with the azure veins painted in fearful
vividness upon its deadly whiteness, the other
hung down by her side, motionless, lifeless and
unconscious—with scarce more sense of sorrow
or of pain than Niobe, when the last shaft had
flown and her last child lay dead before that stony
effigy which had but a moment since writhed with
the anguish of a mother's grief—silent, and cold,
and rigid, save when a quick convulsive shiver,
the only sign of life she had displayed for hours,
ran through her palsied form, shaking it for an
instant, and then leaving it still as the grave and
nearly as insensible—tearless, and mute in her
exceeding agony, Teresa sat erect in a huge oaken
chair placed almost in the centre of the cabin;
with the black girl, her sole attendant, lately her

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slave, but now at least her equal—for in their
common misery all past distinctions were abolished—
crouching on the rich carpet at her feet,
and clinging to the knees of her, in whom, so
deep set was her half-idolatrous veneration, she
could not but imagine some power must still reside,
some magic of authority that must compel
respect even from the world's outcast—the proud,
pitiless corsair.

Such was the picture that met Ringwood's eye,
as his foot crossed the threshold—a picture that
might well have called up sentiments of pity from
the most iron bosom! But in the breast of the
wild Rover pity, which spite his merciless trade
oft found a dwelling there, was for the time overpowered;
crushed as it were, and silenced by the
vast flood of fierce and fiery passions, which
swept across his soul, withering up and searing
every kind sentiment, as the hot lava scathes the
innocent flowers, when he beheld the child—the
heart, as it were, the more than heart—of his detested
foe, helpless, and courting, as it seemed, the
blow that should heap tenfold ruin on the object
of his undying hatred. The voice of memory
spoke trumpet-tongued within him — memory,
fresh from other days and distant climes!—memory,
busy with confidence unwillingly bestowed,
and brutally requited!—memory, full of wrongs,
and woes, and agony, and degradation! The
voice of memory spoke within him—spoke with
a thousand thunderous voices, whose every whisper
was of vengeance!—vengeance, delayed for
long, long years, but never for one hour forgotten!—
vengeance, which should exceed a thousand fold
the injury that woke it!—vengeance, with which
the universe should ring, and which the page of
history should hand down, as unrivaled, to the appalled
and shuddering ears of countless generations!
With such a prompter at his heart's core,
how should he pause to think of Ruth or of forgiveness!
He paused not!—an exulting smile
curled his lip!—curled it with an expression of
pride, malice, scorn, and triumph, that no word
but FIENDISH could convey, however faintly, to
the mind!—his breast swelled with an ecstasy almost
convulsive; his eye positively lightened
with excitement—the terrible excitement of ungovernable
passions, o'ermastering every obstacle—
fierce, furious excitement! rife with the concentrated
fire of every evil, every unholy impulse
implanted by the hand of nature in the breast of
man, bursting the bonds of reason, wild, remorseless,
and untameable. One glance he cast toward
the miserable pair, and cheering himself as if by
a sudden impulse—

“Without there”—he cried—“Ho! without!”

On the instant the door was opened, and the
black woolly head of the gigantic negro was
thrust into the cabin. At the first sound, however,
of the Rover's voice, the Spanish lady, whose
senses, overpowered by the dull torpor of despair,
had not informed her of his entrance, started upon
her feet, turning her clear cold gaze full on the
splendid person of the pirate chief; while down
to her knees clung the black maiden, with the
whites of her eyes dilated into glassy circles by
the intensity of her dismay.

“Take hence the slave girl—bestow her in the
hatch beside the greater arm room; keep her
close prisoner—but, as you love your life, do her
no wrong—not by a word, or look, if you would
scape my vengeance!—gently—away with her!”

A fearful spasm crossed the pale features of
Teresa, as the huge black drew nigh; and it
seemed as though her terrors would have found
vent in a piercing scream, but by a mighty effort
she restrained herself.

“Let go my robe, Cassandra,” she said at
length in tones which, though they faltered, no
terrors could deprive of their almost unearthly
sweetness—“Let go my robe, girl—seest thou
not that no present harm is meant thee?—and if
there were it would boot naught to struggle?
Let go—I say! minion, unloose thy grasp”—she
cried with increased agitation, as the pirate's minister
drew nearer—“wouldst have thy mistress'
person polluted by the touch of yon foul villain?—
nay! tremble not, thou silly one”—she added
kindly, as the terrified creature, relaxing the firm
clasp which she had fastened on her lady's dress,
fell prostrate and almost insensible before her
feet—“they can but kill us—the longest torments—
the direst cruelties—can only lead to that—can
only inflict DEATH!”

As she spoke, gaining courage herself from the
effort she made to cheer her fellow-sufferer's
spirits, Pluto had raised the half-inanimate and
shuddering girl in his strong arms, and was already
bearing her toward the vestibule; when
by a sudden jerk she almost extricated herself
from his embrace, and followed up the first attempt
by a succession of fierce rapid struggles and contortions,
panting and sobbing till it seemed that
her heart would have burst from her bosom,
glaring with her disturbed eyes, and foaming at
the mouth like a demoniac—till finding all her
efforts fruitless, exhausted even more by the violence
of her feelings, than by her terrible though
vain exertions, she sunk into a deep swoon; and
with her head hanging upon the massive shoulder of
the negro, and all her shapely limbs collapsed and
nerveless, was carried off insensible and unresisting.
Alone in that luxurious cabin, surrounded
with all that is most beautiful to the eye, alone

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the Spanish maiden stood in the presence—in the
power of the merciless Rover. Both young—
both beautiful—but oh! how different in their
beauty! She, pale and wo-begone, and cold as
the white marble which alone could vie with the
pure splendor of her skin—hopeless, yet firm—
wretched, yet tearless in her misery! He, flushed
with fiery passions, burning with high hot hopes,
instinct with all the ardent energies, the quenchless
vigor, the indomitable power of animal existence!
She, th every image and ideal of perfect
and most lovely death! He, the unequaled type
of glorious and majestic life! With a slow step,
as if half doubtful of his purpose, the Rover neared
his captive—still she stood firm and motionless,
with her large bright eyes shining out, intensely
black and lustrous, from her fixed and hueless
features—fixed upon his with a cold, steady and
unblenching gaze, like that by which the leech is
said to awe his maniac patient, or man, the monarch
of creation, to quell the fiercest savage of
the wild. It seemed as if that frail and slender
girl had listened and believed the tale, `that a
lion will turn and flee from a maid in the pride of
her purity,' and had resolved to try the virtue of
the spell, but on a fiercer and more tameless
being. And in good truth for a second's space it
showed as though the charm were not all powerless—
the haughty spirit did—did for a moment
quail before that firm and fearless gaze!—the
strong brave man did hesitate, before the timorous
weak maiden! There is in truth nothing so
difficult as to approach, with hostile purpose, one
who opposes calm and passive fortitude to threatened
violence—one who shows nought of fear,
meditates nothing of resistance—who neither
courts nor shuns the peril. Man will hew down
the trembling fugitive, from the same natural impulse
which prompts the dog to tear whatever
flies from him—he will assault with all the pride
of defied valor and insulted strength the strong
one who resists him—but he will rarely—rarely
nerve himself to the attack of one who fears not
nor defies the outrage. At length, with a half
start—a start at his own unwonted hesitation—he
advanced, and laid his hand upon her shoulder,
while she still, moving not, nor speaking, maintained
that steadfast gaze, as if she would peruse
his soul; nor did the slightest change in her deportment
give any token that she had felt his lawless
touch, save that a bright flush darted over
brow, face and bosom, brilliant as the electric
flash, and scarce less rapid in its passage.

“This is well, fair one,” he said with a strange
sneer, curling his chiseled lip—“this is well. I
had looked for tears and outcries!—but you are
wise, my beauty; wiser in your generation, as
the scripture hath it, than the children of light!—
but why so mute, Teresa?—speak, girl, know
you the fortune that awaits you,” and he shook
her gently as he spoke, as if to force an answer.

“The lamb in the wolf's lair,” replied the
maiden, “requires no prophet to foretell her
doom.”

“You know it, then?—'fore God I had not looked
for such most sweet compliance!—you know it,
then, and deem it perchance a rare fortune. I
knew ere while you Spanish dames were gamesome,
and something light of love; but I deemed
not—the more fool I to fancy woman could be at
all, and not be wanton—but I deemed not a Spanish
damsel of thy blood and lineage should know
herself, and knowing rest content to be the paramour
of a robber—murtherer—pirate!”

“Nor do you know it now,” replied she, by a
violent effort maintaining that composure which
she deemed the most likely to procure forbearance—
“nor do you know it now—ten thousand
deaths would I die sooner—nor will I be the thing
thou sayest!”

“How wilt thou help it, sweet one?” he asked
sneeringly.

“By not consenting—and by dying!—force me
you may to your vile will by brutal and unmanly
violence—bow me you may, for the brief space
that is permitted you, to your dire passions—but
wrong is not dishonor, nor outrage disgrace! But
for a little time—a little time can you torment
me—the Lord hath given you the power, and you
must use it as you list—but only for a time.”

“Believe it not,” he answered; not unimpressed
by the cool majesty of her demeanor—“Believe
it not, my power upon you is forever—forever
at least here on earth! That which I make thee,
wilt thou remain till death deliver thee—hearest
thou, girl? I say, till death!”

“And I reply, not long!”

“To die, thou wouldst say, ay! to die by the
sudden sword-stroke is not difficult, nor long, nor
painful, worth the counting! Nor is the poison
cup, though slower and more torturing, too tedious
or too difficult for high and resolved spirits—
and such I do believe is thine, Teresa. Nor in
good truth, as thou didst say but now, are the
most cruel, most protracted means by which the
flesh can be compelled to quiver through a living
death—too much to be endured—to be endured so
long as they may last. But mark me, mark me,
maiden; to die is not so easy! an eye shall be on
you forever—no means vouchsafed while thy fit
lasts—and trust me use will reconcile thee to that
life, which thou deemest it no dishonor to enter
on compulsion—to die is not so easy!”

“Nothing is more so,” she replied, forcing

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herself to go through the task she had imposed upon
her energies. “Nothing is more so. The strongest
frame may not endure a fortnight without sustenance—
and neither thou, with all thy boasted
might, nor all thy mailed myrmidons, can force
one feeble girl to swallow one small mouthful,
save at her own good pleasure!”

“Brave words!” he answered, still with a sneer—
“Brave words, Teresa! but behold! here on
the walls around you hang fifty sheathless poniards,
fifty well-loaded pistols!—had the one feeble girl
been so resolved on death, she might have died
these three hours gone, and none the wiser!
Tush, girl, thou cheatest me not so!”

“Hear me,” she said, with an imploring gesture,
drawing herself a little back from him—
“Hear me at least, as thou dost hope for mercy—
as thou dost trust in God!”

“I do not hope for mercy—I do not trust in
God!” he answered, “Why should I? Mercy
was not for me or mine, when I implored it on
my knees with adjurations, unto which thy feeble
prayers are but as whispers to the sovereign thunder!
God heard not me when I called on him at
my most extreme need. Why should I, girl—
why should I? I do not hope for mercy—I do
not trust in God, yet will I hear thee—hear thee,
for that thou art a woman!”

“Hear me then, and believe my words—nor
think that I feel not, because I shudder not—that
I dread not, loathe not the infamy, because I make
my loathings subject to my will, and speak of
that most coolly which I will not endure and live.
When first I entered here, the thought did cross
my soul that freedom was at hand—the blade was
bared to win it—but suicide is deadly sin—or if
not deadly, allowable but in extremity. There
was a hope! one lingering, last hope then—nor
hath it quite flown now!—a hope that one so
strong, so mighty, and so brave as thou, wouldst
shame to harm a woman!—a woman whom all
men are bound to shelter and defend for that same
weakness which makes it easy—makes it most
base and sordid to assail their frailty. Till this
one hope is gone—I dare not rush unbidden on
eternity. I have thought much—thought coolly
on this matter!—the more, and the more coolly I
have thought, the more I am resolved, and the
more certain mayest thou be that my resolve is
changeless. Injure me, and I die! For some
brief days thou mayest—thou mayest riot, if such
be thy savage will, in the possession, the unmanly
forceful brute possession of frail resisting innocence—
for some brief days of agony to me—of
infamy to thee and of remorse hereafter! With
those brief days—thanks to the mighty Maker,
who made the subtle and immortal soul so sepa
rable from the gross mortal body!—with those
brief days thy power for good or ill—and mine
for agonized endurance, are at an end forever!
Cries, tears, and lamentations I know vain—therefore
I use them not!—but deem not thou shalt
win one favor of my weakness, till that by utmost
force and violence you have overpowered my
most true resistance!”

“One word—one whisper from my lips—and
thou wouldst fly as eagerly to my embrace,
Teresa, as now thou shunnest it,” he again answered,
with the same sneer upon his lip—and
she observed that his voice sounded calmly, and
no longer with the hoarse broken intonations of
overwhelming passion; and that the flush which
had lit up his features, with a light so unnatural and
appalling, had given place to the wonted tints of
his complexion.

“Not though that word would raise me into paradise—
that whisper plunge thee to the abyss of
hell!”

“What if I were to yield thee to the license of
my crew—to the lewd pleasure of yon loathsome
blackamoor!”

“'T is sin—vice—degradation—that is loathsome!
nought else—nought else. Compelled to
my dishonor, I may writhe hopelessly in anguish—
I may die here on earth, and dying live forever
in light, and bliss, and glory everlasting! Complying
I should loathe my very self—should die
each day I lived! and perish, body and soul—
perish now, and forever! But thou wilt not—
thou canst not—thou art a man—a feeling, fiery,
passionate, and it may be a vicious—yet a MAN!
Born of a woman, cradled upon a woman's bosom,
nursed from a woman's breast! thou hast
grown fair, and strong, and noble, reared by the
ministerings of a woman's love! thou didst learn
from a woman's tongue the very accents which
give voice to thy fell threatenings against a woman's
peace! thou hast—thou must have loved,
have sighed for, striven for, done gallant deeds to
win, a woman! and wilt thou—wilt thou now?
wilt thou? no! no! thou wilt not—canst not
wrong one so weak in her frailty—so strong in
her virtue—in her resolve as I! no! no! thine
eye is mild, and thy lip quivers—and—and—and—
thou wilt—wilt spare, protect—oh God! oh
God—thou wilt not wrong me,” and as she spoke,
she flung herself down at his feet; clasped his
knees tight, tight as the serpent's coil, with her
entwining arms; and turning up her pale wan face,
with those dark glorious eyes swimming, yet
overflowing not in outworn nature's agony, toward
the stern, observant, but no longer fierce or inflamed
visage of the Rover—“thou wilt not—for
thy mother's soul! for the sweet memory of

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her whom you first loved! thou wilt not wrong
me!”

“Not now! not now at least, Teresa! But I
have heard thee—hear thou now me. I have a
tale to tell thee—of one as innocent—as beautiful
as thou, who prayed, as thou hast prayed, for pity—
who found it not, and died! This thou must
hear—and then thyself shalt say, if it can be that
I—I, the Rover—the world's scorn and hate and
terror—I, Reginald Ringwood, can pity, much
more spare Teresa de Aviles.”

CHAPTER V. THE ROVER'S TALE.

“I was born of an ancient family in the north
of England—of blood as pure and noble, as flow
in the proudest veins of your Spain's proudest nobles.
My Saxon forefathers possessed the broad
demesne, beneath whose old oaks I grew up—as
firm as they of heart, and scarce less strong of
limb—centuries ere the Norman had drenched our
isle in gore. I know not, and I care not, how—
though they battled to the last for freedom—they
held their landships and lordships until, by time
and intermarriage, the names of Saxon and Norman
were forgotten; and from the mixture of
those hostile bloods arose the strongest, bravest,
wisest race of men that tread the surface of God's
earth. I know not, I care not! I only know,
that to me those broad lands descended through a
long race of honored ancestors. I only care that
I was born, and bred, and shall not die—an English
gentleman.

“I had a father, noble, and generous, and good—
a mother—who was indeed a mother, and who
is a saint in heaven!—a sister!—oh! such—such
a sister—ay! thou art fair, Teresa—wondrously,
exquisitely beautiful—but she was as far before
thee, as is the glorious sun before a farthing rush-light!
She was—but I can not—can not describe
her. No! not to my own void and aching heart,
that never hath been filled since—never even for
a moment! She was the comrade of my childish
joys, the soother of my boyish griefs—the dear
repository of my every hope or fear—the bright
encourager to all things high and noble—the true
unflinching friend—the only one! A few years
younger than myself she grew up to bright, glorious
womanhood under the kindred shelter of my
stronger youth—she was my all in all—oh God!
how I adored her.

“But I must on—while I was yet almost a boy,
the secret heart-burnings, the disaffections and
dissentions, which had so long been smouldering
darkly between the king and parliament, blazed
out into rebellion and fierce civil war. Both parties
flew to arms—the nobles and the gentry of
the land, with many of their yeomanry and tenants,
drew their swords for the king;—the citizens
and burghers, and not a few of the smaller
landholders, espoused the cause of parliament.

“Throughout the north the gentry, many of
whom were Catholics, were loyal to man—and
with the Vavasours and Musgraves, the Landales
and the Wentworths, my father buckled on his
arms to fight beneath the standard of his king—
and well he fought for it, from its first ominous
erection at. Worcester amid storm and tempest,
till it fell never more to rise upon the fatal moor
of Marston; where he too fell beside it, undauntedly
but vainly striving against the iron-clad invincibles
of Cromwell! Boy as I was, through
all those bloody fields, I fought beside my father's
bridle. Boy as I was, at Brentford I was thanked
by Charles himself before the leaders of the
army—boy as I was, when my bold father perished
in his stirrups, I slew the man who smote him
down, and drew off his retreating troop, sorely
diminished but unbroken. It is a long tale, but
suffice it, that Lilburn a few days afterward stormed,
sacked, and utterly destroyed the dwelling of
my fathers—that, overdone with weariness and
wo and watching, my mother wasted away, like
snow before the April sunshine, and died at length
of that worst malady a pined and broken heart.
Then, our lands became the heritage of others—
apportioned by the victor Independents to the least
scrupulous, and bravest of their creatures;—then
was our very name—a name coeval in proud fame
with England's story—proscribed, and outlawed.
As best I might, I cared for my loved sister's
safety. In the mean dwelling of an ancient servant
of our race, a humble fisherman upon the
western coast, in lowly guise and under a feigned
name, for years she was concealed in safety—
while I, rash, desperate and daring, fought fetlock-deep
in blood wherever banner waved, or
trump was blown in England—now in the ranks
of some united host, and under some renowned
and regular leader—now leading my own little
troop of undismayed adventurers through the wild
pleasures and yet wilder strifes of that guerilla
warfare—the fiercest and most feared of the king's
partisan commanders. Enough is told, when I
have said that not a single plot was planned, a
single insurrection fostered, but my head was busy
with its machinations. That I fought on with
Lucas, Lisle and Goring, till every hope was lost—
that in the siege of that loyal city Colchester, I
shed my blood in its defence till all was over;
and owed my safety then to wounds which fettered
me to my sick bed, and to the unbribed faith

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of a poor laundress, who concealed me from the
hand of my inveterate pursuers. After long
months of suffering, and of precarious hiding, I
reached at length the cottage, where, without now
one hope of seeing me again on earth, my sister
lingered on in sad but patient sorrow; looking for
death alone to liberate her from the woes which
weighed her down to the brink, as it were, of that
wished-for grave, which, seeming to yawn ever to
receive her, opened not to her prayers. Alas!—
alas!—that it did not! Alas! that she died not
then, with the young freshness of her innocent
beauty pure as an angel's sigh—spotless as God's
own sunshine! But words are vain—sorrow is
vain—all! all is vain, save vengeance!

“It was deep night when I arrived at that lone
cottage—and oh! the ecstasy, the thrilling ecstasy,
that quivered through each nerve of my
rapt frame as once again I clasped that angel sister
to my heart—never again, as fondly I believed
and falsely, to be torn thence, while both had being!
Little time was there then for joy or sweet
affection—little enough for needful preparation,
and swift flight! The moon had risen before I
reached the cottage—before she set, the lugger
was afloat; manned by stout hands and trusty
hearts; her every sail distended by an auspicious
breeze; bearing us, bearing us forever, from nature's
sweetest names—our home, our country!
Long centuries before, my father's race had intermarried
with a high family of Spain—and, although
time had loosened the essential tie of
blood, friendly connection had been maintained
ever; and still, in name and courtesy at least if
not in very deed, the haughty family of English
Ringwoods were cousins to the proud Spanish clan,
whose head is—the Melendez de Aviles!

“Start not, Teresa! By the God who looks
upon us now—who looked of yore on that most
hellish crime—who shall anon look on that crime's
meet retribution. By the God—I say—the God
of both our fathers! the blood of thy race runs
even now, not as the lava of Vesuvius, through
every artery and vein of this my body! my body
that has lived through agonies and toils and perils,
which might have consumed nerves of brass and
thewes of tempered steel, which would have worn
out mine, but for the treasured oath of vengeance
that upheld me!

“But passion boots not. What is done, is done!—
what shall be, shall be! Friendly connection
had, I said, been maintained ever! Letters had
passed from age to age, presents been interchanged,
and mutual benefits done and requited. When
our Black Prince displayed his Lion banner in aid
of your King Pedro, my ancestor was rescued
from the wrath of that brave bastard, Henry de
Transtamara, by the Melendez of that day. When
Spain's armada was dispersed, scattered to the
four winds of heaven, by Frobisher and Drake
and Haskins, it was a Ringwood that redeemed
the chieftain of the Des Aviles; and sent him
home cumbered with gifts and ransom, free from
the dark tower of London. Allied in blood, allied
by mutual courtesies, my father—when first war
broke out—remitted treasures, plate, gold, and
store of jewels, to the faith of his Spanish kinsman.
Provident and prepared for either fortune,
he looked to Spain as an asylum, should the king's
cause be bucklered by bold hearts in vain. When
my good father fell—letters—fair letters full of
greeting—full of high courtesy and noble promise—
styling me `Dear and trusty cousin,' praying
me `of my love to deem his purse as mine—his
palace as my castle', were borne to me—fair seeming!
false! false letters! signed `Juan de Melendez
de Aviles.' Full of all honorable confidence,
full of all gratitude and love, now that even hope
was lost in England, I set sail; freely as to a second
country, for the bright shores of Spain! as
to a second home, for the proud halls of De Aviles!
Three days' fair sail, we made the Spanish coast!
another week, and in Madrid we were received,
received not as exiles and outlaws, but as most
honored friends, most esteemed kinsmen, by that
same Juan de Melendez—that same vile, heartless,
soulless thing, which thou callest father. Aye!
I recall it! all—all—every thing! The very palace
gates, upon the porphyry steps of which the
smooth-faced fiend received us—the very liveried
menials, who cringed so humbly to our bidding,
the very smile, the very gesture, yea more, the
very garb, with every small detail of plume, and
scarf and jeweled rapier, which he wore—all
gleam upon mine unforgetting eyes distinct and
palpable, as though they were depicted to my
outward sense by some rare limner's skill. He
was a noble gallant to the eye; witty, accomplished,
beautiful, and brave—nor, as I fondly
deemed, more fair than faithful. Every art, every
gentle knowledge, every superb accomplishment
were centered in his mind, his manner. To the
eye nothing—nothing of God's creation here on
earth could be more glorious, more transcendantly
surpassing man's estate, more godlike! In heart,
no thing on earth, no thing in the abyss of hell
could be more utterly corrupt, more base, more
superhumanly depraved and bad, more fiendish!
Yet years passed, ere I gained this knowledge,
years passed, and I believed him—nor was I even
then unwise in this world's wisdom—all that was
kind, and good, and noble. What wonder that
one younger than myself, artless and unsuspecting,
judging of others' faith by her guileless

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standard, full of sweet fervent gratitude, betrayed into
security by her own very purity of soul, and by
the sanction of a brother's presence should have
believed as I! and loved! and—and—oh God!
that I must speak it—fallen! fallen! the victim
to a perjury so hellishly devised, so deep, so fathomless,
that wisest wisdom would have been all
at fault to sound it! The growing love of my
sweet sister, the constant and devoted wooing of
the enamored Juan I saw, and was well pleased
to see it. For—when I saw the liking mutual;
when I knew that my Teresa in purity of an unstained
descent was a match meet for kings; that
in the rescued treasures of my father's house she
had a fitting dowry; that in all else—beauty of
form and face, intellect, feeling, soul—she would
have been a prize for the choice of angels; when
I beheld and knew all this, I had no whisper of
false pride to bid me interpose between their inclinations
and their union! I had no doubts, no
fears, no hesitations! Juan, too, had a sister—a
fair, bright, artless being, of whom, if I did not
entirely love her, I had at least mused fervently
and deeply. Thoughts of a double link had crossed
my mind, as no impossible solution to the Gordian
knot of our entangled fortunes, not as a termination
to be gained by rash or sudden speed,
but as an end, which, other things agreeing, might
in due time crown all our cares with pure and
peaceful happiness. Thus days, and months rolled
on calm, undisturbed, and happy. At times
indeed a touch of wonder would come over me,
why—when their mutual feelings were so evident;
when my approval might have been known
even from my silence; when every thing was
suitable, and no cloud even on the remote horizon
threatened a storm which could divide them—
why they should so prolong their courtship—so
needlessly delay the consummation of their bliss.
Still, as they seemed to understand each other, I
deemed it equally indelicate and unwise, that I
without the shadow of a pretext should interfere
between them. Entirely unsuspicious, therefore,
and fearless even of the possibility of wrong, I left
things to their natural course.

“Meanwhile an opportunity at length occurred
for my advancement, my establishment in a befitting
rank, and active service; an expedition
was in course of preparation under the prince,
Don John, for the low countries, there to co-operate
with the great Conde, against the allied force
of the Cromwellians under Lockhart, and the
French Mazarinists under the great Turenne,
which had already reduced Gravelines, and Merrdyke,
and were now threatening Dunkirk. In
this fair expedition I was appointed to take part;
and in no humbler station than lieutenant-general
of the cavalry. This proud appointment was obtained
for me by the solicitations of Melendez, for
which—Heaven's hottest curses blight him!—I
deemed him worthy of my eternal gratitude.
Brief space was granted for my preparation—yet,
ere I started on my honorable duty, I opened my
heart freely both to Melendez and Teresa; and it
was settled that, the campaign ended, they at
least should be made man and wife; while Juan
plighted me his word that, should I prosper in
my wooing with his sister, his every aid should
be forthcoming. With a light heart I started; all
careless at the present, all confident of the bright
future. In a short time we reached the Netherlands,
and there my every faculty of mind or
body was engrossed by my military duties. It is
not now my purpose, for it avails us nothing, to
spin out long details concerning that disastrous
and disgraceful campaign, wherein we were out-witted,
out-manœuvred, and out-fought. First
came the defeat of Sandhills, whereat the English
standard waved on both sides, and victory
was once again decided by the stout fanatics of
the republic! then Dunkirk instantly surrendered!
then step by step were we beat back, town after
town admitting our victorious foes! Enough,
that at the Sandhills I was dismounted in the last
charge of the superior cavalry of Castelnan,
which broke us like a thunder shock! My right
arm shattered by a pistol shot, my helmet cloven,
and my skull laid bare by a long broadsword-cut,
a pike wound through the broken taslet of my
left thigh—twice I was galloped over by the contending
troopers in close melee, and left for dead
upon the field. Rescued by the attachment of a
veteran follower from the tender mercies of the
plunderers, I lay for weeks insensible, and for
weeks more in helpless agony till the campaign
was ended by a truce; and weak of frame, bent
and bowed by my half healed wounds, I slowly
journeyed homeward. Something I was indeed
discouraged, and something grieved, that during
my long illness, during my slow recovery, no
letters should have reached me whether from Juan
or my sister; yet even this might be explained by
the distracted state of the whole country; France
torn at the same time by civil strifes and foreign
warfare; the Netherlands divided into fractions,
filled with fierce bands of foreign soldiery; all
business at an end, and all communications interrupted.
Consoling myself with such thoughts as
these, for the neglect of my Spanish friends, I
journeyed, with all speed my frail health would
allow, toward Madrid. I reached that splendid
city; hurried through its deserted streets, for it
was midnight when I arrived, to the proud dwelling
of Melendez. The porter who replied to my

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loud summons, after a pause strangely at variance
with the former promptness of attendance
which characterized all my friend's retainers—
knew me not at the first; so strangely was I altered
by the enfeebling nature of my wounds, and
by the great exhaustion consequent on my journeying
with those wounds yet unhealed—nor
when he recognized me, did he seem wholly unembarrassed
by my appearance. The family, he
told me—Don Juan, and the Lady Isidore, and
the English Senora had removed from the city
several months before; and were now dwelling
on a magnificent estate, of which I had heard
Melendez speak with rapture, situate on the lower
ridges of the southeastern Pyrenees. Worn out
with fatigue, I resolved to give myself a single
day's repose; in the course of which I learned
from the porter, that shortly after the removal of
the family from town, tidings had come that I had
been slain at the Sandhills; and that no subsequent
news had arrived concerning me, so that on
all hands I was believed dead; to which he cunningly
attributed his consternation at my unexpected
re-appearance; he also mentioned, as a
casual report, that it had come to his ears that my
sister had been married to the Conde de Aviles,
shortly before the tidings of my death in battle.
The following morning, so much of fever had
anxiety and toil produced, that I was miserably
ill, and utterly unable to rise from my couch,
much more to undertake a tedious journey. I
wrote, however, on the instant, both to my sister
and Don Juan; telling them all that had befallen
me, mentioning the reports which had encountered
me on my arrival, promising to make all due
speed to join them, and praying them to write me
instantly, as I was all anxiety and agitation. Ten
days elapsed before I was enabled to rise, and a
week more, before I could endure the motion of
a horse—yet not a line had come to hand to lighten
my curiosity, which was fast growing—why I
knew not—into a fixed presentiment of evil. At
length I was sufficiently recovered, and on a bright
autumnal morning, gallantly mounted and well
armed, followed by two stout English veterans, I
sallied forth from the portals of Melendez; hurrying
with the speed of fear toward the city gates.
Before I had reached there, however, I was surrounded
and arrested by a band of the holy brotherhood
according to a warrant of the all-powerful
Inquisition. Four months I languished in its
dungeons, often examined, often threatened with
the torture, forbidden any intercourse with those
without—in short entombed alive. At length,
when I had given up all hope of liberty, I was
discharged with no more of explanation than I
had received on my capture—what of that? there
was no possible redress! I had been denounced
to the Holy Inquisition—therefore arrested! The
charge had not been made out—therefore I was
discharged! and well for me, I ought to be content!
yea! thankful! and I was thankful—none
but the captive know the exceeding, the transcendant
bliss of freedom. I was free! I was strong!
for spare food and hard lodging had worked miracles
for the restoration of my health—I would
seek out my friends—fly to my sister!

“I repaired once more to the palace of my
friend—when, to my mighty wonder and yet
mightier rage, the porter dashed the wicket in my
face with a horse laugh—barred it within, and
grinning through its barred lattice to my teeth, he
bade me `go seek my sister in the Lazar House—
meet place for harlotry like hers!” Words cannot
express my rage, my madness. All availed nothing—
madness, rage, entreaty!—no farther answer
was returned to me—the wicket opened not—
all was contemptuous, scornful silence. At
length, dreading I know not what, I turned me to
the Lazar House, and there—there—oh God! there
I found her!—there in that den of guilt and misery,
dying by inches, worn, and wan, and wasted—
there on the sordid pallet vouchsafed by niggard
charity, in the last agonies of life, pale as the
sheeted snow, and shrunken till each bone of her
fair frame seemed struggling through the transparent
skin—there found I my sweet sister. She
died—happy at least to die upon a friendly bosom—
she died in blessing me, and praying, from Eternal
mercy, the pardon of her murderer. She died,
but not till she had faltered forth the tale of her
unprecedented ruin! The sun did not turn pale
in heaven—the earth yawned not, nor trembled—
nature held on its wonted course—God heard the
tale, as he had looked upon the deed—and the fell
villain prospered—prospered, and laughed in the
exulting pride of conscious strength, and high impunity
of wrong! All from the very first had
been premeditated—I was appointed to command,
merely that I might be removed from the scene
of destined outrage—a future period was appointed
for the marriage, merely to drown all possible suspicion.
Scarce was I gone, before the treachery
stirred into action; the first step was to find an
expert forger of handwriting; nor was this first
want long upgratified—a villain, triple dyed in
guilt, a disfrocked monk of Italy, the minister for
years of Juan's secret infamies, was pitched upon
for the foul deed; and foully he performed it. My
letters, regularly intercepted by Melendez, were
laid before him, one by one, as they arrived, till
he had learned the trick of my handwriting; so
that I scarce myself could mark the fraud. This
done, the work commenced—letter was forged on

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letter, to that unhappy girl, urging her to delay
no longer the consummation of her nuptials—urging
her by a thousand specious pretexts, and at
length enjoining it upon her, as the last dying mandate
from a brother's death-bed, to be united on
the instant to Melendez. So specious was the plot,
that mortal wisdom scarcely could have fathomed
it. Her letters, like my own, were intercepted—
answered!—each argument refuted—each doubt
set aside—each apprehension banished!—moreover,
not my handwriting only, but my whole
turn of composition, my character of thought, my
style, had been so copied, that as I read the living
evidence of the lie, myself, I almost deemed them
mine. It is enough, that they prevailed!—a marriage,
a false marriage, performed by that same
villain monk, and witnessed by, her sex's shame,
the shameless Isidore, completed the accursed
plan. Innocent—innocent she fell! Fell, as an
angel might have fallen, and yet remained an angel.
Secure of his poor victim, flushed with success
and passion, he carried her to his castle in
the south; and till satiety had effaced passion, and
custom worn away the charms of novelty, had
treated her with at least the semblance of affection.
Soon, soon was the dream ended! My return
from the army struck the last blow to his
expiring love—if love that may be called, which
was in truth corrupt and brutal lust! The illness
which delayed me, deemed an auspicious chance—
with unexampled, aye! unheard brutality, in the
most public manner, in the most coarse revolting
language before his grinning menials and sycophantic
guests, he told that suffering angel of the
fraud—the fraud which had destroyed her! jeered
at her tears—yea! bade her convey her beauties
to some new lover, and some fresher market!
And when she clasped his knees in agonies of tearless
supplication, he spurned her; spurned her
with his foot, and bade his vassals cast her forth
into the wintry midnight. Alone, on foot, in the
light garments of the ball-room, without food, or
aid, or money—she was cast forth at midnight;
doubtless cast forth to perish. But so it was not
fated! through storm and snow she struggled on!
barefoot! begging her bread! She reached Madrid,
and fainting in the street, some charitable
hand conveyed her to the wretched dwelling,
where suffering, and wo, and utter desolation,
soon brought her to the long last home; sole refuge
of the wretched. She died! Died, I say,
died! but left me living; living alone for vengeance.
My tale is ended! it boots not to tell how,
when the second Charles regained his father's
throne, he yielded by base amnesty the lands
of his true followers, to the oppressors who
had seized them. A double outlaw, thence, have
I lived for vengeance—and though thus far thy
father hath escaped me, some have I had already,
more shall I have ere long—ay, to satiety!—

“Some have I had already!—and that, girl, not
a little. That monk I watched for weeks—for
months—(thy father, conscience-stricken, had fled
his country.) For months had I watched him, till
as he journeyed toward France, through the wild
passses of the Pyrenees, I swooped upon him. I
dragged him to the loneliest peak of those dread
summits—stripped him and bound him to a thunder-splintered
tree—it was the very height of
summer—placed food and water close before him—
so close that he could see! so far that he could
not reach it—no, not to save his soul! I left him
there to perish—yet watched him from a distance,
that none might succor or release him—
that I might hear his blasphemies, and mark his
agonies, and glut my soul's dear vengeance. He
perished—how, you may guess; he perished there,
and knew me ere he perished.

“Thine aunt—the Lady Isidore—married, as
thou knowest well, Teresa, the Conde di Ribiera;
and within three months after, was found dead—
pierced by three mortal wounds—in her own bridal
bed. I slew her!—I, Teresa—I!—I, Ringwood
the avenger! scaled the terrace at midnight—
entered her room and woke her—woke her to
die! One shriek rung through the silent house,
rousing its every inmate! I leaped from the balcony,
one moment ere the chamber-doors flew
open. Have I not been avenged?

“Before your father's eyes, your brother died
by the torture!

“Before your father's eyes, Teresa, you shall
be shown ere long!—shown—what he dared to
call my sister, and lied in calling her! Start not—
be sure of it; for it shall be! This only boon
I grant thee—grant to thy courage, girl, and nobleness
of heart!—that not now will I wrong
thee—nor by violence!—thou shalt consent to
thine own degradation! Meanwhile, rest here—
that state-room shall be thine; and the black girl,
Casandra, shall be restored to thee; fit garments
shall be furnished thee; thou shalt eat at my table.
Answer me not, girl!—not a word—it shall be so,
I say it shall!

“I must on deck, somewhat is moving there,
that needs my presence. Content thee, and farewell!”

CHAPTER VI.

Broadly and brightly dawned the morning,
which followed the departure of the buccaneers,
upon the forest-girdled walls of St. Augustine.

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The sun shone blithely, and freshly the sea-breeze
blew. The small waves, crisped by the lightsome
air, danced glittering in the sunlight; while thousands
of white gulls were on the wing, fanning
the wavelets with their silver pinions. Jocund
and merry was the scene; and heavy must that
heart have been, which yielded not to the sweet
soothing influences of the time and seasons.
Heavy was every heart, and downcast every eye,
of those who were abroad on that fair morning.
The bells of many a church and convent were
ringing.

“With a deep sound to and fro—
Heavily to the heart they go!”

while on the four tall frigates, which now lay
moored in shore, under the covering guns of battery
and bastion, the colors waved at half-mast in
honor to the dead, whose obsequies were even
now in process.

And now the city gates flew open, and a long
train of monks and friars chanting the mournful
miserere, with crosslet and with crosier, censor,
and pix, and crucifix, swept forth from the wide
portals. Then upborne on the stalwart shoulders
of four great Spanish captains, whose plumes and
sword knots of pure white betokened the brief
years of him they mourned, followed the coffin of
the young Melendez! Words cannot paint the
agony which overshadowed the bold lineaments,
and bowed to earth the manly frame of Juan, following
to his last home the last male scion of his
immemorial race. Bravely, however, manfully
he struggled with his tortures, and subdued them.
Steadfastly did he gaze, with a fixed, tearless eye
upon the disappearing coffin; as with heart-sickening
sound the dull clods of unconsecrated earth—
for unanointed he had fallen, unhouseled, and
unshriven—rattled upon its hollow lid; one quick
spasm shook his every limb—distorted every feature;
as the last sod was flattened down over that
cherished head, which now perceived, felt, suffered
nothing. The soldiers gathered round the grave—
flash after flash—roar after roar—the volleyed
honors of their musketry burst over the dull ears,
that heard them not, nor heeded. But with the
rattling din the high soul of the father lightened
forth from the cloud of grief, which had oppressed
it—he drew his long bright rapier from its scabbard,
stretched it forth slowly above his son's low
bed, and then uplifting it, with his eyes glaring
upward, flung his left hand abroad; and with distended
chest, bent brows and head erect, stood for
a second's space motionless, stern and silent,
though his lips quivered as with inward prayer,
sublime and awful in the might of self-controlling
energy and pride. Then with a loud clear voice—

“Hear!”—he exclaimed,—“Hear thou! Maker
of all things, Judge of all men, hear! I, Juan de
Melendez de Aviles, noble of Spain, and knight of
Calatrava, swear!—here on the grave of the last
male of the proud name I bear—Here, with my
foot upon the sod that covers that young head—
with my sword in my hand, I swear: never while
life is left me, never by day nor by night, fasting
or feasting, mirthful or in the hour of wo, to cease
from plotting, from pursuing, from revenging!—
never until this sword is crimson to the hilt with
the heart-blood of him who slew thee—thee, innocent
and helpless that thou wert, mine own and
only one. If ever I unbelt the brand, if ever I
withdraw me from the chase, if ever I relent, or
spare, or pardon, till that the sword, the faggot,
and the gallows have, each and all, been glutted
with the lives of thy destroyers—if ever, oh! my
son, I forget to avenge thee—may my flesh feed
the vulture and the wolf—my soul be yielded to
man's everlasting foe!”

He paused, and as the sounds of his last accents
died away—moved by one common impulse, a
dozen of the cavaliers who had accompanied the
funeral train, and who bareheaded, but with flashing
eyes and inflamed visages, had listened to the
father's imprecation, unsheathed at once their
swords, and pointing them to heaven, chorused
that awful oath by one deep, heartfelt, and unanimous
“amen!” “For us—for us, and our sons
after us,” they cried, “be thine oath binding!—
never to spare, nor pardon, nor relent!—never to
cease from hunting to destruction the murderers
of thy dead son—the ravishers of thy living daughtea—
never, so help us God, St. Jago, and our
honor!”

The mournful ceremonial was concluded; a
massive cross of stone was pitched into the sand
at that grave's head, marking the spot where he
slumbers now so soundly, that hapless but high-hearted
boy—the spot, where yesterday he bore
so soldierly and well the tortures which had slain
him. The military music of the garrison struck
up—the very trumpeters, inflamed by the sympathetic
indignation which blazed forth so vividly
from these untamed and fearless cavaliers, struck
up, unbidden, that famous tune of old, the “War
song of the Cid”—the soldiers clashing their arms
in unison, and the wild cadences of the shrill brass
piercing each ear and stirring every heart, they
marched back to the city full of exulting valor,
parched with the thirst of vengeance.

A few hours later in the day, a dozen horses
led to and fro before the doors of a large building,
with a considerable crowd of grooms and servitors
and several sentinels on duty, betokened something
of more than ordinary import to be in process
of enactment. It was the government house,

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before the gates of which that concourse was
assembled; and in an upper chamber, the governor,
with his chief officers, was sitting in high
council. Melendez, as became his station no
more than his skill and mature wisdom, presided
at the board; Pedro, Gutierrez, and the veteran
Diego were seated the nearest to his person; the
captains of the four caravellas now at anchor in
the bay lent their co-operating aid, and the bold
youth, Don Amadis Ferrajo, though scarce entitled
by his years to such proud eminence, had
earned, by the brilliant reputation of his impetuous
valor, a place there which he filled with as
much of dignity as did the stateliest veteran of
them all. At the lower end of the long table
were placed two secretaries fully engaged in
minuting the orders of the council; while just below
a sort of bar, that ran across the council
chamber, two Spanish veterans, well armed with
sword and halbert, watched over a young stalwart
negro, who stood between them, entirely naked,
except a cloth about his loins, and a pair of Indian
moccasins upon his feet, with manacles of steel
upon his hands, but with a high free port and bold
demeanor. In a recess, likewise, below the bar,
usually covered by a curtain, which was now
drawn up, a fearful looking instrument, composed
of many wheels and springs of steel, over which
leaned a truculent dark-visaged ruffian, showed
the full means to which the council had recourse
to elicit truth from stubborn prisoners or unwilling
witnesses.

Pointing to these recess, with its appalling contents,
Don Juan was in act of speaking to the prisoner,
when he was interrupted by his saying, in
very tolerable Spanish,

“There is no need of that, your Excellency!—
without compulsion I am ready to declare all that
I know of these buccaneers—for that I do know
something of them, it were quite needless to deny.
I have dealt with them often—sold them my fish
and vegetables; and very liberal buyers are they
too—somewhat rough handed at odd times, but
what of that—if they did slice off my old comrade
Xavier's ears for selling a raw Englishman a lot
of gulls for wildfowl, they gave him gold enough
to buy his freedom afterward. Yes! yes! I know
all their haunts—and I will tell the truth—yes! I
will betray them all—lead you up to their very
hold—now they have carried off the fair young
Senora, who had ever a sweet smile and a kind
word for the poor blacks. As for the proud
young Don, they might have tortured him to all
eternity, ere I would have told aught against them—
but now that they have carried off Teresa—”

“This to me, dog?”—Melendez interrupted him,
in tones that revealed the violence of his feelings
—“Know you to whom you speak? This to me,
to me, villain? Seize him, you halberdiers, strip
him, and drag him to the rack. By the bones of
St. James of Compostella, he shall taste straightway
of these tortures, he prates about so glibly!—
yes! by the sacred souls of all the martyrs—he
shall die under them!”

“For heaven's sake, hold, your Excellency,”—
Diego whispered in his ear—“or we shall get no
word from him. I know the knave of old? He
is as stubborn as an old mule of Arragon, and has,
I believe, no more feeling than a fish. Suffer his
insolence, for God's sake—so by his guidance we
may save your daughter.”

“You say very well, Sir Don Diego”—interrupted
the free black, who had overheard him—
“You say very well and wisely. For if he gave
me one wrench on that cursed rack I would not
speak one word to him; and if he were to kill
me, you know, that would bring him no nearer
to recovering his daughter. No! no! it is no use
to hurt me—not the least in the world. Besides,
I did not mean to vex him when I spoke—I was
thinking aloud only, and would n't have said it, if
I'd thought—not but what it was quite true. I
won't deny that it was quite true. But lord!
it would be no use racking me—you'd just as
well get Spanish words out of the big old alligator
down in the castle ditch, as you'd get any
thing but curses out of me by all your torturing.
But as I said before—I'll tell you all the truth,
and bring you right upon them, now that they've
carried off Teresa. Yes! yes! I know where
they're gone, and I'll carry all of you after them—
but not with those big caravellas—they draw
quite too much water. But you can take the ship
boats in, and mount some heavy guns in the long
fishing pirogues—and then—yes! yes! then you
can catch the rogues, and kill them—and eat them
if you like, too, for that matter—but I suppose
you don't care so much about that—and save the
pretty Senora—for I don't think they've done her
much harm yet—he's an honest chap, is that Ringwood
to be such an infernal thief—and pay them
for screwing the young Don, down there. Yes!
yes! that will be better much than racking me;
now won't it?” and he burst into a yell of most
obstreperous laughter.

“May we trust—think you, good Diego—in this
knowledge that he boasts of?” whispered Melendez
to his veteran counsellor.

“Unquestionably may we”—answered the
other, in the same low tones. “There's not a
bayou or lagoon, a river or salt creek in all Florida,
he does not know as well as his own hut—
nor a sand key, or solitary rock along the coast,
but he has once and again explored it. Besides

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he is in league of amity with the red Indians, the
wild Seminoles; and if he chooses he can bring
out the warriors of their tribe to aid us. He is a
faithful knave too, and a valiant; though somewhat
bold of speech, and to the windward not a
little of due reverence for his superiors—yet no
man ever heard him tell a lie, or break a promise!
Best place full trust in him! Heard you not what
he said of Senora? since she was but a child he
loved her—and he knows, as I hear, right well the
character of the great English Rover.”

“Well, fellow, you can guide us, as you say,
and will. Well then, suppose we trust you, shall
we set forth, and how?”

“You shall set sail to-night—directly”—answered
the negro promptly—“with your four caravellas;
and make all speed quite round Cape
Florida—and then run sixty miles up, close along
the coast—then get out all the boats, and man
them full; and take along with you fifteen or
twenty big pirogues—the fishermen came in this
morning after the storm, filled full of soldiers,
and with heavy guns. There is a narrow—oh
very narrow—creek, not ten yards quite across,
puts in there from the sea, covered with manchinell
and mangroves so no eye can discover it—up
that you shall row twenty, aye, nigh thirty miles;
and there you will find a big clear lake, with fort,
and village, and feluccas—there live the pirates!
their strong hold.”

“And you can pilot us? So be it, then!”

“No! no!” replied the black, “pilot you I
could very well; but that won't do!—no! no! if
you go up alone, the pirates fire on you from the
bush, cut you up quite, beat you all to the devil—
no! no! my comrade Xavier, he best must pilot
you. I must get out old Tiger-tail—the great
chief of the Seminoles, with his red warriors, and
go quite quiet through the forest—so when you
take them front, we fall upon their back, and
shoot them every way—destroy them altogether.
Don Amadis go along with us—he'll go along
with black Antonio, he'll go—he fears not any
thing!—take fifty musket men, and with the Indians
we'll do—yes! yes! we'll do quite well,
and save Teresa!”

“He's right—your Excellency—black Antonio
is right,” exclaimed the eager Amadis, “I'll go
with him by St. Jago! He shames us all for wisdom!—
and hark, Antonio, I'll take a hundred
men, not fifty—a hundred of my own old Castilians.
Where will you find the Indians?—where's
Xavier?—quick! quick speak.”

“Xavier's below, Don Amadis, he was along
with me when these kind gentlemen,” looking
toward the halberdiers, “laid hold of me, and he
won't stir, till he sees me! And for the Indians,
never fear but I can find them—get you your men
into marching trim, with lots of ball and ammunition;
and let each soldier bring a spare firelock
with him, so can we arm a hundred of the Seminoles,
and meet me at the land gate by sunset, and
we'll get under way at once!”

“Hold! hold!” replied Melendez, evidently
speaking in great agitation and much doubt, “this
will not do—I fear—no! no! It will be quite
impossible to act in concert; we shall fall on at
different times, and so be beaten in detail.”

“Not so, fair sir,” the negro answered eagerly,
“the Indian runners will watch all your movements
from the shore, and bring us world into the
bush, when you have pulled up into the stream,
and how you prosper!—no fear but we can act in
concert!”

For a few moments the stern governor mused
deeply, the dark expression and hard lines of his
bold visage showing no tokens of incertitude or
agitation; yet the broad hand, which he had laid
upon the board, quivered perceptibly, and he kept
beating his heel with a quick nervous action
against the footstool, which was placed before his
honorary chair.

“Remove the negro,” he said at length, raising
his eyes slowly from the floor on which they had
been riveted—“treat him with kindness, but
keep strict ward on him—begone!”

A little bustle took place, while the halberdiers
were leading off Antonio, and the secretaries, in
obedience to a signal from Don Juan, were withdrawing
from the chamber. The moment it
ceased, however, Melendez rose from his seat;
and casting his eyes round the circle as if to read
the thoughts of each of his advisers, addressed
them firmly, with a voice, low-pitched indeed,
and perhaps somewhat subdued, but steady withal
and unfaltering.”

“Gentlemen,” he began, “and comrades. I
am a father, as ye know; and, as a father, must
feel deeply the appalling situation of my most
wretched child—must burn to rescue her from the
pollution which, if it have not tainted, surrounds
at least, and threatens her. I am a soldier likewise,
and governor of this fair town; and, as
such, am in honor bound and duty, to fetter down
all private sentiments obedient to my military devoir!—
am bound to provide, before all things, for
the good state and safety of this my loyal government.
I am hard set, and look to all of you for
council. Should we adopt the negro's plan, and
trust to his guidance—as, if we move at all in this
same business, I see not how we can do else—
there is good cause to hope! great cause to fear!
If he be trustworthy, and if his plan succeed, we
shall preserve Teresa—root out, and utterly

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destroy a nest of pestilent accursed pirates, and win
great booty, and no small renown! If on the
other hand we fail—which we may do right easily—
our whole force must be annihilated—nor is this
all! We must so weaken the garrison here at St.
Augustine, for to make any head against them
we shall need every man that we can muster—
that if we be beaten, and the buccaneers follow,
as they doubtless will, the blow, they might well
win the city! Thus stands the case—there is a
mighty gain! there is a mighty peril! I can not—
I dare not decide!—for I cannot distinguish, so
fiercely is my soul disturbed, between a parent's
passion, and a leader's duty! Speak ye, in order
then! Diego—first! and oh speak honestly and
freely!”

Before he had sat down, the old grayheaded
warrior started to his feet; and cool although he
was, and guarded for the most part, he spoke as
hotly now—as passionately as a boy!

“The question, gentlemen, is this—this absolutely!
ONLY! Whether we shall give up a woman—
a Christian maid—a Spanish lady—to the
brute violence of these incarnate fiends—without
one blow—one effort to relieve her; or march
with all our power to liberate her, if we may!
to die for her if we may not! Being myself a
Spaniard, a soldier, and a knight, I have but one
reply to this question, and see not how a Juan
could find a second! we must assay it with all our
best endeavors, and leave the rest to God!”

“Not for the maiden's sake alone,” exclaimed
Gutierrez eagerly, “though that were ample
cause! but, as I see the matter, in duty to our
king we stand bound to avenge the insult offered
to his flag, in duty to humanity to hunt out
wretches, who set its every dictate at defiance,
in duty to the laws of common policy to strike at
the foe in his own place of strength, rather than
wait his pleasure to assault our weakness!”

“Besides,” cried Pedro, “we are far stronger
than our ordinary power by aid of these stout caravellas—
their crews will double our effective
strength!”

“I brought with me, a private volunteer, one
hundred picked Castilians, bound to no duties,
save at mine own will,” cried Amadis with fiery
vehemence; “if not a soldier else stir from the
city gates, I, with my men, march out to-night
at sunset!”

“And I,” exclaimed the elder and superior of
the four Spanish sea captains, “as in obedience to
my broad letters of commission, shall sail this
night with my four frigates, to take, burn, sink,
and by all means destroy, and harass the foemen
of my king and country! Eight hundred stout
hands can we muster for boat service; leaving
enough behind to work and guard the caravellas!
Do you, Sir Governor, embark six hundred more
of your best veterans on board us, press every
fisherman and mariner to follow us, with every
boat, pirogue or galley, they can find; let this
young cavalier go with his followers to join the
Indians, and my life on the issue!”

“Be it so, gentlemen! Fair thanks to all for
your good courtesy! and may God guard the right.
You, Don Diego, I leave here—nay, it must be so,
my good friend—lieutenant in my absence. Pedro,
Gutierrez, let the drums beat to arms!—muster
the garrison in the great square! pick out six hundred,
the youngest and best soldiers!—let each
man have his morion and breast plate, but no back
piece, brassards or taslets; each man a musket
with an hundred round of cartridge, broad-sword
and dagger, and two pistols! Ye gentlemen of
the marine will see them on board straightway!
A word with thee, Don Amadis! Ye to your duties,
gentlemen, anon I will be with ye!”

“Amadis,” he continued, as soon as they were
left alone, “win her and wear her! If God give
you the grace to rescue her, before God shall you
wed her. Get your men under arms, take with
you black Antonio, and God speed you!”

Trumpets pealed wildly through the streets—
the drums rolled long and loud—and, with the clash
of arms and tramp of marshaled footsteps, the
veterans of the garrison were mustered! Before
the sun set, the tall caravellas had cleared the
landlocked bay; staggering out to sea with a fair
breeze, each stitch of canvas set, that they could
carry; and his last glances fell upon the little
party of Don Amadis, filing away under the
guidance of the faithful negro, into the pathless
forest.

CHAPTER VII.

It was already afternoon when Ringwood left
he cabin; so far had the recital of his tale,
broken by violent fits of wrathful indignation,
and bursts of fiery passion, trespassed upon the
day. When he reached the deck, he found he
had conjectured, justly, the cause of the bustle
overhead, which had excited his attention, while
in the very heat and tumult of his remembered
wrongs and meditated vengeance.

The vessel was now heading to the northward,
having already rounded the extremity of Florida,
and, with the wind on her larboard beam, blowing
strong and warm directly from the Gulf, was
running close in shore along the western coast of
that forest-mantled promontory. The alteration
in the course of the felucca, and corresponding
changes of her trim and tackling, had, therefore,

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as Ringwood supposed, produced the sounds on
deck—confusion tending unto order. The wide-spread
studding sails which had protruded many
feet beyond her ordinary yard-arms, wooing the
favorable breeze, while previous to their doubling
the cape, it had fallen full upon her starboard
quarter, were now reduced, her topsails reefed,
and her topgallant yards sent down, as if in preparation
for a storm, although no cloud or speck
of vapor was visible on the bright clear horizon.
Her consorts, close behind her, were gliding
along gently under the same easy sail, in obedience,
as it seemed, to a set of signals floating at
Ringwood's fore, and thence repeated by each following
barque of the squadron, which came on
singly, in long file, the leading vessel being a
mile, at least, in advance of the last. The waves,
or wavelets rather—for though the breeze blew
steadily and strong, the surface of the Gulf was,
notwithstanding, singularly calm and level—were
as bright, and almost as transparent as a sheet of
crystal; every rock, every coral reef that rose
sheer from the white and sandy bottom—nay,
every green variety of ocean-grass and weed,
every bright shell and gorgeous sea-flower that
studded, as with a thousand living gems, the glistening
pavement of the deep, was visible as
clearly as though no denser medium than the air
were interposed between them and the eye that
gazed in rapture on their wonders. Scores of
bright flying fish, their white scales glancing silvery
to the sunshine, their wing-like fins fast flashing,
leaped up from the small ripples, momently, and
vanished beneath them; the blue shark shot along,
suspended, as it were, in the transparent waters,
leaving behind him a long streak of flashing lustre;
the albatross soared high upon his snow-white
pinion, while gulls and sea-swallows, and
petals of every size and color skimmed the calm
deep in the pursuit of prey or pleasure. To the
right, meanwhile, lay the low shores of Florida,
glowing with mingled tints of almost magical verdure.
Tall palms, with their soft, feathery tops,
towering far, far up into the blue serene, above
the denser foliage of the oaks and locusts, which
blent with giant cedars; and the funereal cypress,
hung with long wreaths of pale and ghostly moss,
composed the eternal forest—the forest which,
in its turn, overbowering thousands of flowering
shrubs: magnolias, with their vast chalices of
odoriferous snow; and dogwood, bright with unnumbered
star-like blossoms: roses of every hue;
calmias, and rhododendrons, and azalias, with
manyfold and clustered bloom, varying from pure
white, through all the shades of blush, and pink,
and violet, to gorgeous kingly purple. And above
all, the orange, that young bride of the vegetable
world, enriching all the atmosphere with powerful
and almost oppressive perfume. Bushes of
manchineal and mangrove fringed the low banks,
growing far out into the shallow waters, which
actually laved their roots, and floated the long
wreaths of massive greenery that garlanded their
pendulous branches.

Hard by the outer verge of this sea-cradled
coppice, with little room to spare between her
tall topgallant masts and the wide-reaching limbs
of the huge forest trees which, here and there,
protruding from the brow of some bluff eminence,
or island knoll, overhung the navigable channel,
the gallant picaroon shot onward, her bellying
sails shimmering white in the meridian sunbeams
and the glad waters foaming before her sharp,
lean bows, rippling with a hoarse laughter along
her beautifully moulded sides, and forming in her
wake a broad and frothy furrow, where, parted
for a moment by her fleet transit, they foamed
and frolicked as if they joyed in their reunion.
Fair blew the western breeze, and fresh; and, as
the sun turned westward in his path of glory, it
freshened more and more: and as the shades of
evening grew less distant, fleeter it waxed, and
stronger, till it became a stiff, though not unfavorable
gale.

Long before this, had the topgallant masts of
the felucca been housed; and now her topsails
were close reefed, and still with undiminished
speed—now lying over as the gale fell full and
steady on her distended canvas, till her long
yards seemed on the point of dipping into the
waves to leeward; now surging up again with
graceful elasticity in every temporary lull—the
rapid barque flew through the gurgling waters.
Fast flew she, nor less fast did her gay consorts
follow: nor did the winged hours flag more than
they in their career across the firmament.

The day was nigh spent, and the dim presage
of approaching night was stealing fast over the
azure vault, on the last western verge of which,
his lower limit already merged in its ocean bed,
glowing like a red furnace with his borrowed
lustre—half the sun's disk of gold hung on the
very point of disappearing. A thousand purple
tints were creeping over the bright pure sky; a
thousand rosy gleams were flickering upon the
glassy waves, most like the varying hues seen on
the changeful scales of the expiring dolphin; and
now he plunged into the deep. For a few seconds,
long, radiant streams of many-colored light,
ruby, and pink, and violet, checkered the darkening
arch: these passed away, and a deep purple
shadow swept slowly, as projected from a
curtain interposed, across the firmanent of heavean—
across the laughing waters. Scarcely,

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however, had that purple shade pervaded the
whole visible universe, before another change
succeeded. Myriads of stars, planets, and stationary
orbs, and confused milky constellations,
burst out at once, like eyes unclouded from sleep,
beaming, or twinkling with quick diamond rays,
from every quarter of the deep blue, viewless
ether, which stretched away, contrasted to their
sudden brilliancy, far, far—a vast abyss of lustrous
blackness. Still fair and freshly blew the
breeze—still the bark bounded onward, eager as
the worn steed, which all forgets his weariness
as he draws nigh his stall.

“Ho! Cunninghame,” exclaimed the Rover,
pausing in his walk to and fro on his brief quarterdeck.
“Ho! we be here at last—bid them
beat instantly to quarters.”

The order had been anticipated by the crew
before the words were spoken—the drummer had
assumed his instrument, and the men were already
mustered in divisions, expectant of the call to
quarters; for they had made the last well-remembered
headland, a short league to the southward of
their harbor. Taking his cue then from the
Rover's words, almost before his officer had issued
the command, the long roll of the drum
might be heard mingling with the sweet sigh of
the sea breeze; and with the first rattle the strong-handed
crew flew to their proper stations.

“Down with the helm, haul on your starboard
braces!” The rattling of the blocks succeeded,
and the harsh straining of the cordage, mixed with
a rumbling creak, as the huge yards obeyed their
impulse; and instantly the graceful ship swung
up almost into the wind's eye, and stood with
scarce diminished speed directly from the shore,
which she had hugged all day; going, although
close-handed, at a rate not inferior to seven knots
the hour. It needed, therefore, but a little while
to gain an offing of a mile; when she again went
right about; and, with her head pointing straight
on shore, dashed onward with the wind dead
astern.

“Away there, topmen!” and with the word,
the nimble hands were hurrying up the rigging,
and ready for the next command.

“In with your fore and mizen topsails,” and
ere five minutes had elapsed, the sails were clued
up in festoons, and the ponderous yards upon the
caps. “Strike the foretopmast” followed; and
instantly the heel of that huge spar ran half way
down the lower mast—“Strike the mizen topmast.
In with the main topsail.” These orders
were immediately obeyed; and in less than ten
minutes from the time when she had gone about,
the felucca was dashing, as it seemed, dead ashore,
with her three topmasts struck, her yards a cock
bill,and not one stitch of canvas, save the fore-topsail,
set.

Before her lay the shore, low as it has been
described and level—bordered with a deep fringe
of floating verdure—among and over which the
surf, set in by the strong western gale, broke high
and stormy, and covered far aloft with the impenetrable
and eternal foliage of the tropical
forest! Behind her whistled the driving breeze,
and swelled the rolling billows! on she came fast
and fearless! and now her bows were almost battered
in the upflashing surf! yet was there visible
no opening in the low-growing mangroves—no
gap in the vast mass of leafy blackness, which
stood out like a wall in clear and palpable relief
against the starry sky! one thing, however, might
have been marked by a sailor's eye, although a
landsman would scarce have discerned the sign, or
known its meaning, if he had discovered it. Right
under the light vessel's bowsprit there showed
one narrow spot where the surf broke not, where
undisturbed the floating mangroves reposed upon a
streak, for it was nothing more, of dark blue
water, scarcely ten yards in width, where for a little
space the giant timber that overhung them receded
from the margin of the billows. Right upon
this the felucca steered, the practiced hand of no
less a mariner than Ringwood wielding the obe
dient tiller! Right up this she steered, as though
she followed a well known and easy channel into
a secure harbor.

“Ready there forward with the long starboard
falconet!” demanded the clear accents of the Rover.

“Ready, sir;” was the quick response.

“Then fire!” a stream of vivid flame burst
from a bow port of the picaroon, driving a cloud
of snow white smoke before it, and the loud
booming voice of the heavy gun succeeded. Immediately
a quick thin flash was seen ashore followed
by the report of a carbine—and then, right
in the centre of the little day formed by the recess
of the forest trees, directly over the space of
dark blue water, a blaze of red light burst forth
sharp and dazzling, a dusky crimson glare, in
which the bright green foliage of the underwood,
and the rugged stems of the huge timber trees,
the purple billows, and the dark sky, glowed with
a deep and lurid tinge. “Stand by there, with
the grapnels!”

On! on! she darted—the thick embowered
manchineels were pierced by her long tapering
bowsprit—her cut-water plunged into their dense
greenery—the parted branches rattled and scouped
against her lean bows as they severed them—the
leaves, entangled in her rigging, were torn violently
from their parent branches; a moment, and

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she had passed through them; and with the impulse
of her previous motion, was rushing up a
deep but narrow river—so narrow, that there
were scarcely six clear feet of space between her
bulwarks and the shore on either hand. “Heave”—
and the iron graplings, whirled by strong hands
and with a will, rattled among the tangled coppice—
“On shore there!”

“Ay! ay!”

“Haul taunt, and belay!” and instantly, from
either bow, a strong rope was dragged forcibly
ashore by unseen hands, and made fast to the
giant trunks, which swelled both banks of that
dark stream with an unbroken barrier,—the vessel
was checked from her way, and after lying for a
few seconds motionless, yielded to the strong tide
which was setting like a mill-race outward, and
fell aft to the full swing of her cables.

“Get hands enough ashore now, Master Cunninghame;
carry out warps, and swing her round
the point—look alive! look alive! Godslife—the
Albicore is close in shore even now; heave at the
capstan ho!—round with it, men—round with it!—
or she'll be into us stern on!”

Scarce forty yards from the embouchure of the
river, the channel turned at a sharp angle round a
low point into a small round basin; whence with
a tortuous route the stream might be traced—turbid
and black and swift, but singularly narrow;
for miles into the heart of the forest, to the far
source where it boiled up at once, from the bowels
of the earth into a large broad pool,—so deep
that never lead had found its bottom, even at its
birth a river. Upon this point a little knot of
men was gathered: and here the light had been
displayed at the felucca's signal, which had now
quite expired. The men wrought eagerly and
well; and many minutes had not passed before
the picaroon swung round the point into the
little landlocked basin; just as a gun from the
Albicore announced her close proximity, and was
replied to, as before, by a brief exhibition of the
same crimson light.

Meanwhile the Rover had got all his boats out,
and strongly manned; so that before the second
barque rounded the inner point, he was already
under way—towing, and sweeping, where the
stream occasionally widened, and warping through
its frequent windings toward its sequestered source—
hearing, each after each, the signal guns of his
consorts as they made the cove, and confident that,
for a time at least, all were secure from peril,
whether of wind or warfare. Through all that
livelong night the crews toiled faithfully by gangs,
plying the oars in the light whale-boats, or laboring
with more severe exertions at the huge sweeps of
the felucca! All night they toiled!—but not all
night did Ringwood, wearied with past labor and
yet more overdone by struggling with his own
furious passions, watch on the guarded deck. At
midnight, or a little after, descending the companion
stairs, he sought the privacy of his own
cabin. Erect and stern the negro sentry stood at
his wonted post, presenting arms as his proud
leader passed.

“Let Charon call my steward,” he said, “bid
him bring food and wine.”

“Even now it waits you, noble sir,” answered
the black attendant, “this hour or more it hath
been prepared.”

Without more words the Rover entered his
apartment, and blithely did it show, and cheerfully
by the bright radiance of the large crystal
lamps, suspended from the gilded beams, and
throwing into every angle and recess a flood of
clear illumination. The large square board, still
cumbered with its accustomed load of books and
charts, papers serawled over with problems of
singular and abstruse calculation, quadrant, and
astrolabe, and compass, and other instruments of
singular device, and, as in those days it was
deemed, rare virtue—had been wheeled aside;
in its stead a small round table, covered with a
cloth of brilliant whiteness, and bearing all provocatives
to tempt a languid appetite, now occupied
the centre of the cabin. A single cover of
richly chased and burnished gold, with spoons and
forks of the same precious metal; a goblet rough
with the work of Benvenuto's graver; several
tall rummers of thin Venice glass, flanked by
two flasks of wine, were appropriate decorations
to a cold larded capon, a salted neat's tongue, caviar,
and other delicacies of a like thirsty nature

Yet did the pirate chief manifest little inclination
to taste the dainties, which—till he saw them
set before him—he fancied he had needed. He
threw himself into a velvet-cushioned chair, which
stood beside the board, stretched out his legs, and
covering his face with his broad hand, remained
for many minutes silent, absorbed in deep and
gloomy meditation. At length he started up and
sat erect, gazing about him with a strange bewildered
glance, as if he had expected to discover
some one whose voice had roused him from his
lethargy—within a second's space, however, he
was calm and collected as before.

“Marvelous, marvelous, indeed!” he said,
thinking aloud as it were, and probably unconscious
that his thoughts had found utterance,
“marvelous tricks our truant fancy plays us,—
but—tush!—I am outdone with weariness and
watching, and my mind wanders.”

He stood up, and drew his hand across his forehead,
as if to pluck aside some cloud which veiled

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his mental eyesight—then seizing a tall flagon of
champagne, he untwisted the wire which secured
the cork, decanted one half of its generous and
foamy liquor into a mighty glass of Venice crystal,
quaffed it off at a single draught, and replaced
the goblet. Then, as if conquering his
deeply seated loathing, he applied himself to carve
the capon, placed a few morsels on his platter,
and forced himself to swallow a mere mouthful.
But it was all in vain! Again he had recourse to
the rich wine; and after drinking it, fell back into
his chair, and as before mused deeply; dark frowning
shadows stealing across his broad fair brow,
and strange emotions curling his lip at times with
a fierce sneering spasm—anon these gloomy signs
passed over, and were succeeded by a severe
though sad expression: as if some tender melancholy
recollection had swept over the unfolded
tablets of his soul, and erased for the moment
thence each darker stain of sin or worldly sorrow.

“ 'Tis strange,” he said, again, after a long
deep pause, “ 'tis passing strange, how at this
time the images of by-gone scenes, aye, to the
very verdure of the trees, and shadows thrown by
the yellow sunbeams athwart the laughing landscape,
array themselves before mine eyes, in palpable
distinctness. Yet was there no link—no
chain in the tenor of my thought to join these
visions of the past, with the utility of the stern
present. Strange, they are very strange indeed,
these pranks of the imagination! Those boyish
reminiseences were clear upon my spirit, as the
events of yesterday—every word that I spoke
myself, every tone that I marked of others—and
thou, thou too, my sister! The ancient village
church—the quiet and sequestered pew in the
shadowy corner—the sunbeams full of clusty
notes streaming in through the oriel window—the
humble devout congregation—the old gray-headed
curate—aye! I could hear the very accents of his
sonorous voice, could mark the hum of the responses,
could hear the lisping trill of thy small
girlish treble—my sister—my lost sister!—as we
did kneel together on the bright Sabbath mornings—
as we did kneel—and pray!—pray—pray,” he
muttered, as though the sense of the word had
escaped his understanding; then struck his fore-head
heavily with his expanded palm, “and now!”
he said, “and now! Well—well it is no matter!”
and, rallying by a violent effort his scattered
senses, he quaffed off a third goblet of champagne,
and moving with a rapid and firm step toward the
starboard state room of his cabin, seemed as
though on the point of opening the door; but just
as his hand touched the latch he paused, for the
low sound of regular calm breathing fell on his
ear. “Ay!—ay!” he said, “ay—I had forgotten!”

He turned away, and entering the alcove between
the two small chambers, looked long and
with a fervent and excited gaze upon the lovely
picture which hung there, with that serene and
innocent smile which, like a seraph's voice, seemed
to pour something of consolatory hope into the
bosom—worn as it was and blighted, and filled at
that very instant by turbulent and fiery conflict
between good thoughts and evil, of him who gazed
on it so fixedly.

His eye, as he withdrew it from the picture,
fell on the crucifix of gold, which stood upon the
little table under it—and, moved as he was by a
strange and long unfelt revulsion, he knelt down
before it, and burying his head in his clasped
hands, burst at once into a flood of wild hysterical
weeping.

“I know not,” he said thoughtfully, as he arose,
“I know not—would God that I did! Cunninghame,
now, would term this nought but a heated
mind working upon a wearied body—but no! no!
I know it not—it is not so! Why do I doubt? I
who have never doubted, or pity, whose revenge
has had no check or stay of mercy! Whence,
whence these retrospections to the long, long-forgotten
past?—these journeyings backward of the
soul to pure and innocent days? Whence this insatiable
and longing wish for rest—for rest—for
something stiller than mere repose—sounder than
earthly sleep—more peaceful than tranquillity itself?
Wherefore this loathing of hot action, for
which till now I have alone existed? Is it that
coming death is even now spreading above me the
shadow—the prophetic gloom of his approach? Is
it, that now but one deed more rests to be done,
until my great revenge shall be completed, and I
may lay me down, my last toil ended, and sleep—
sleep dreamlessly—soundly—and forever!—and
yet that one deed?—that one deed?—no! no! no!
Great God, it cannot be—and still—my oath!—
why—why—doth she look like my sister? Well!
well!—to-morrow will be time enough! to-morrow!”

Still gazing thoughtfully about him, and walking
to and fro with his right hand firmly pressed upon
his forehead, and his left hanging down by his side
tightly clenched and quivering, he mused a little
longer—then locking the outer door of his cabin,
he turned into his state-room; and without altering
his dress, or drawing off his buskins, wrapped
his watch-cloak about him, and threw himself on
his cot; where motionless and seeming in tranquil
sleep he lay, till the morning sun shone broad and
bright into the stern windows, pouring a flood of
golden light upon the cold stern features which
felt not, nor acknowledged the genial warmth of
its young lustre.

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CHAPTER VIII.

The strong beams of the morning sun, pouring
a flood of emerald-tinted lustre, caught from the
leafy arches through which they made their way,
into the stern lights of the Rover's cabin, aroused
him from his troubled slumbers. He rose up on
the instant in perfect possession of all his senses,
drew his hand once or twice across his fine broad
brow, as if to wipe away some thought that had
sat heavy there during the hours of sleep, and
then plunged his whole head into an ewer of cold
water, to cool its feverish throbbing. This done,
and his disordered dress arranged with somewhat
finical nicety, he hastened to the deck of his galley,
where his presence was hailed with a shout of
enthusiastic rapture by the assembled crew.

The scene was widely altered since the preceding
sunset; for now the pirate squadron lay calmly
floating in a small wood-girt basin, so exquisitely
clear and glassy, that every line and moulding of
the vessels, every small rope and fluttering pen-nant,
was drawn to the very life on the dark mirror
of the still deep waters; and it might well
have tasked the strongest vision to define the exact
place where the substance and the shadow met,
so wonderfully were they blended.

At first sight it appeared that this small pool
or lakelet, which was so nearly circular that it
might have been fancied artificial, and in no direction
was it a quarter of a mile across, although so
marvelously deep that the deepest sealine had
never yet found bottom, though run out to five
hundred fathoms, was altogether landlocked, and
had no outlet for its brimming waters; for it was
hedged around on every side but one, by the dense
brakes and ever-living umbrage of the tropical
forest, and there the shore sloped gently upward
in a rich turfy lawn of the tenderest verdure. On
a nearer inspection, however, it was not difficult
to detect the spot, by the opening in the tree-tops,
where rushed from that secluded spring the powerful
and abundant stream, which boiled up from
the bowels of the earth, here at its very birth a
river; although it made so short a turn immediately
on quitting the parent basin, that no part
of its course was visible. Immediately on the
water's edge, where the smooth lawn sloped upward,
forming a gentle hillock, a long green mound
of short close greensward, cut into many an angular
zigzag, many a crescent, and wedged ravelin,
and a butting at either extremity on a small half-moon
bastion of wrought stone, presented a terrible
array of batteries mounted with above a hundred
black-mouthed cannon, grinning defiance to any
bold invader, who should penetrate so deeply into
the Rover's haunts, as to reach this his inmost
hold, many a mile aloof from the blue billows of
the Mexican Gulf. From either bastion there was
drawn a line of powerful stoccadoes facing an
eastern rampart with many salient angles, running
entirely round the hillock between its grassy esplanade
and the deep masses of the forest which
surrounded it; and a broad ditch cut with vast labor
through the swampy soil, and lined with
square hewn timber completely isolated the position,
which had been chosen with so much skill,
and fortified so masterly by the directions of the
great English Rover. The space within the lines,
which might have formed an area of a mile's circuit,
contained many long wooden buildings, erected
at right angles to each other, with wide verandahs
and long porticoes, all clustered round the base of
the hill; presenting a picturesque and gay appearance;
for they were painted tastefully enough
with white and green in broad contrasting stripes,
like some of the modern Italian villas, and all the
verandahs were furnished with curtained awnings
of the most sumptuous and magnificent materials,
velvets and rich brocades, and gold and silver tissues,
more like the fanciful pavilions of some
fairy palace, than the adornments of a piratical
stronghold.

Around the crest of the little hill, commanding
the whole area, and forming evidently the citadel
of the position, a triple line of earthen ramparts,
with deep dry ditches, crowned with chevaux de
frise, and mounted with long culverins, guarded
the scarped ascent, and encircled a large keep or
block-house, which occupied the summit of the
knoll—the Rover's palace-castle.

Such was the scene which lay brightly illuminated
by the low morning sunbeams, but checkered
here and there with cool blue shadows, cast
by the forest trees and grotesque buildings over
the emerald lawn, under the eyes of Ringwood.

But though he was no mean judge, nor careless
observer of the wild charms of nature, he had
gazed too often on that strange and lovely prospect,
to give at this time more than a passing
glance to its attractions—besides, the moment had
its duties. There was of course no anchorage in
that unfathomed gulf, whereon the low and rakish
picaroons floated so calmly; they were moored,
therefore, in shore, for the banks were all abrupt
and molden, by books and grapnels; Ringwood's
felucca, as the largest, lying the farthest from the
batteries, and covering the outlet of the river with
her broadside. The other barks were anchored
to the shore at various points, so as to concentrate
their fire on the same spot much farther up the
basin and under the very guns of the fort, the
smallest of the squadron lying directly in front of
the water gate, and covered by the eastern bastion.

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The crews, it would appear, of all the rest, had
already landed; for with the exception of a single
sentinel on the forecastle of each, not a soul was
to be seen on board; while, dotting everywhere
the verdant area of the fort, some lounging idly
in the cool shadows of the curtained porticoes,
some walking to and fro in little groups and parties,
some dallying with gaily dressed, light-mannered
girls, two or three hundred of the buccaneers
were visible; while from within the dwellings,
loud bursts of revelry, mingled with the sweet
laughter, and half sportive shrieks of women, and
now and then a gay licentious song, or the tinkling
of a lute, betokened the presence of many
more inhabitants than met the gazer's eye.

“Ha! Anson,” exclaimed Ringwood, addressing
one of his subordinate officers with a smile,
“I have played something overmuch the sluggard;
and these good fellows are, I warrant me, fretting
to be ashore among the bona robas yonder. So to
it, sir, at once: hoist all the boats out presently,
except my private pinnace, and have the people
landed. Keep the barge to the last; I will ashore
in it myself.”

A louder acclamation than that even which had
greeted the appearance of the rover on his deck,
now burst forth from the merry crew as they
rushed with tumultuous hurry to their quarters,
eagerly urging their light duty, and hoisting out
the boats with many a jovial cheer and hasty
halloa! For a few minutes the great buccaneer
stood looking on in silence, till the last boat had
pushed off with its noisy freight, leaving the
barge's crew alone, waiting for their superiors,
who were grouped on the forecastle; and the small
private pinnace swinging beneath the stern-lights
of the cabin. Then, motioning his officers to wait
for his return, he descended the companion-stair,
and once more entered his own cabin.

“Pluto!” he cried—“Ho! Pluto!” as he entered;
and as the negro sentinel thrust in his turbaned
head, at the half-opened door—“jump up
on deck, and clear away my pinnace; bring it
round to the starboard gangway, and after we
shall have left the ship—I and the gentlemen—do
thou and Charon lead down the lady there, and
the black lass, and row them straight to the sallyport,
entering the covered way: I will be there
to meet ye; and hark, sirrah, in your ear—do
thou, or thy swart comrade but once look lustfully
upon their beauties, and thou shalt wish thyself
dead fifty times, ere death shall end thy tortures.
See to it, and begone;” then, as the negroes
hurried forth to execute his orders, “Teresa!” he
called aloud—“come forth, Teresa.” There was
a pause of a few minutes, interrupted only by a
slight rustling sound as if of female garments, from
the state-room; but no one answered any thing:
nor did she, when he called, come forth. “What,
ho!” he cried again: “come forth, come forth,
Teresa! or by the Lord that lives, you shall repent
it. Best not provoke me, beauty.”

As he spoke the door opened, and the sweet girl
came forth, somewhat refreshed, indeed, by sleep,
but with her clear and luminous skin still pale as
alabaster; so that her large dark eye, contrasted
with the singular whiteness of her face, showed
almost supernaturally full and lustrous. Her hair
had been arranged in neat broad plaits, wound
simply round the classic contour of her head; and
over her high brow a single heavy curl falling
down with a massive sweep behind each delicate
ear; but her neck, and the first gentle swell of
her young bosom, were all bare, and her round
dimpled arms uncovered to the shoulders; yet,
even in her disarray, there was so true a dignity
in every motion, so rigid and severe a modesty in
the chaste, sorrowful eye, so perfect an air of unconsciousness
of aught unseemly—although, indeed,
she was most conscious—that the most hardened
debauchee could no more have found matter
for voluptuous thoughts there, than in the cold,
denuded limbs of marble saint or angel.

“I come,” she answered, her words flowing
out in a calm, passionless, and even strain, as
though her very fears were dead. “I come, obedient
to your call, so to eschew worse outrage.
I come; what would you?”

“Sweet lady,” replied Ringwood, with a half-meaning
courtesy of accent, “sweet, innocent
lady, that you prepare you straightway to take
boat, in charge of my stanch guardsmen, and so
to my poor dwelling: there I will see you presently.
Meantime, in yonder state-room are store
of velvet mantles; take one of them, I pray you,
and wrap you closely in its folds; and 'twere no
evil done, if you should cast a silken kerchief in
lieu of veil, over those lovely lineaments. I
would not give your charms to the brute gaze of
the rude sailors.”

“Wherefore, kind sir, and most considerate,”
she said, a slight flush rising to her pallid cheek,
“or to what purpose would you veil, to-day, me,
whom, but two days ago, you did display in so
unwomanly disarray to the same eyes from which
you now would hide me? perchance from motives
not pure and disinterested?”

“Simply,” returned the Rover, in a cold, resolute
voice, “simply, for that it is the will! and
have a care—have thou a care, Teresa, provoke
me not too far—I say provoke me not! It were
as easy, every whit, to me, to strip your charms
to the broad day, and so parade you to the gaping
wonder of those brute mariners, as to say `veil

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[figure description] Page 040.[end figure description]

your beauties!' By God!” he added, lashing himself
into fury as he proceeded, “by God! it were
as easy to cast you forth a booty to the untamed
licentiousness of those who know no mercy—as
thus—”

“As thus, from selfish passion!” she interrupted
him, “thus to reserve me for the more foul dishonor
of your own private pleasures!”

“Of my own private pleasures!” he repeated,
mimicking the very tones of her voice—“of my
own private pleasures! right daintily worded that,
dear lady, and very true withal. My own most
private pleasures, of which, believe me, sweet
one, you soon shall be the most choice minister,
and the well-pleased partaker—and now to punish
you for this, your insolence, and teach you wisdom
for the future!”

And with the words, he made one quick step
forward, and throwing both his arms round her
fair form, one encircling her lovely shoulders and
swan-like neck, the other twining with irresistible
pressure her slight rounded waist, he clasped her
to him in a close embrace, kissing her lips, and
sucking her sweet breath, till she had well nigh
fainted in his arms. She did not shriek, nor
struggle—no more could she have struggled within
the overpowering grasp of that gigantic frame,
than could the linnet strive against the talons of
the ger-falcon. She did not shriek: for there
was none to hear: much less to aid, or rescue her.
But yet she yielded not, one jot—much less responded
to his passionate caress—but stood within
his circling arms, cold, rigid, stern, impassive as
a wrought shape of bronze or marble—not a pulse
in her body bounded beyond its usual motion: not
a quicker throb of her bosom answered to the hot
beatings of his heart—not a pant was on her
breath, not a cloud on her clear steady eye, not a
dew drop on her honeyed lip—but when he again
released her from his arms, a faint brief color
stole over her cheeks and brow, and, when it receded,
left her even paler than before—and a quick
shudder shook her limbs for a moment.

“Thus deal I with the stubborn,” said Ringwood,
as he let her go, “thus deal I with the insolent
and stubborn! see, if you like it not, that
you offend not in like sort again! and now, do as
I bid you, and make ready!”

As he spoke, he turned on his heel, and leaving
the cabin, rejoined his subordinates on deck, and
shortly after going down into the barge threw
himself at his full length on the cushions in the
stern sheets, and was pulled to shore as rapidly as
twenty vigorous seamen could ply their oars in
that calm basin. While she, deserted by the calm
resolution which had borne her up while in the
presence of her persecutor, and which a secret
instinct rightly taught her to be the only weapon
with which she could successfully oppose his forceful
violence, burst instantly into a wild agony of
tears and sobbing, and falling to the ground, continued
in a series of fainting fits and swoons, until
the terrified Cassandra, who had been twice already
summoned by the negroes, brought her back
to her senses, by her half frantic entreaties, that
she would arise and obey the orders of the Pirate,
if she would save her life or honor. Then she
aroused herself at once, as soon as she became
conscious of her handmaid's meaning; and casting
one of the velvet cloaks around her, by a strong
effort gulped down the whole of her hysterical
passion, wiped away the traces of her tears, and
followed the tall negro to the pinnace wherein his
fellow was already seated at the oar.

No princess of old Spain could have been treated
with more ample courtesy, more deep respect
by the most stately cavalier of her proud court,
than was Teresa treated by the two pirate blacks.
Not a glance of their bright eyes rested upon her
features for a moment, not a word was spoken,
but such as were of absolute necessity; and, when
she had taken her seat in the stern of the little
boat with the black girl crouching as usual at her
feet, the men took to their oars, and pulled as fast
as they were able, in perfect silence, toward the
sally-port at the base of the western bastion, upon
the battlements of which, the stately figure of the
great buccaneer was already visible, as he awaited
the arrival of his captive.

As the boat neared the port, however, he descended
from his lofty stand; and as the keel
grated upon the pebbly marge, the portcullis rose,
the gate flew open, and displayed him standing
within the low browed arch, a third negro, of
similar dimensions to those who were assisting
the girls from the boat, holding a flambeau at his
side.

They had not entered one second's space, before
the iron grating was again lowered, and the heavy
gate swung back, leaving the boatman on the outer
side, and Teresa found herself in a low narrow
vaulted passage stretching away into interminable
darkness, though continually ascending by flights
of broad flat steps, as if toward the daylight; but
little being rendered visible by the smoky torch of
the negro who preceded them in silence, except
the key-stones of the rude arch overhead, and the
mildewed walls on the right hand and left.

“Take my arm, girl,” exclaimed Ringwood,
“and lean on it!—mind what I say to you, and
forget not the lesson I was compelled to teach you,
even now; which, by the heaven above us! shall
be as nothing to that which you shall learn, if you
be any more refractory!”

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Pale as the winter's snow, and scarce less cold,
she took his proffered arm, in silence but untrembling;
and she did lean on him, for in good truth
she was scarce able to support herself even when
she entered; and the dank mildew vapors of that
cold vault, wherein the drops of moisture were
constantly detaching themselves from the roof and
plashing on the muddy earth, had yet more overpowered
her, so that full surely she had lacked
the strength to drag her limbs along, had she not
been supported by the nervous arm of Ringwood,
to which she clung with a convulsive gripe of
which she was indeed scarce conscious.

After walking for some distance through this
deep covered way, having ascended not less than
a hundred steps at different times, and in various
places—they reached a huge oak door clenched
with large nails, which gave them access to a tall
winding staircase, carried up through a shaft in
the earth, similar to a well, each step being a
beam of solid timbers, hewn rudely with the axe,
and all unconscious of the adze or plane of the
neat-handed joiner. After ascending this rugged
stairway, they reached a little vestibule, above
the level of the ground, the floor and walls of
which were covered with neat Indian mattings,
lighted by a long shot-hole or crenele, through
which a golden sunbeam, full of a million dancing
motes, streamed in, filling the little space
with glorious light and gaiety, which seemed more
lovely to those who viewed it in close contrast to
the swart darkness of the subterranean galleries,
which they had but just quitted. From this small
vestibule a second staircase, wrought in the thickness
of the wall, quickly conducted Ringwood and
his fair captive—close to whom crept, more terrified
a thousand times than her pale mistress, the
black slave girl Cassandra—to a well lighted airy
hall, overlooking—as it was easy to perceive—
from the upper story of the Rover's keep, the
whole green end of the pirate fortress, with the
gay dwellings and the glassy bay, and the beautiful
vessels moored in their several berths, all
laughing out in the glad golden sunlight, which
poured down every where over the wide spread
tropical forests, and over that small inland lakelet,
from the soft smiling heavens.

The hall in which they stood, lighted by four
tall lattices, and looking down upon that romantic
view, was itself worthy of attention from its
magnificent and tasteful decorations. The ceiling
of dark Indian wood, from which swung a vast
golden lamp that once had decked some sacred
edifice, was polished till it shone like a mirror;
the walls, covered with hangings of green velvet,
were all adorned with groups of glittering weapons,
disposed in rare and picturesque patterns of
every singular variety of form and purpose. Shirts
of ringmail, and corslets of bright plate, and
casques embossed with gold circular shields of
oriental fashion, Damascus cimiters, and Spanish
blades, and rare Italian daggers, all glittering
with gems and flashing to the morning sun. The
floor was carpeted with velvet, and a divan of the
same rich material, corded and laced with gold,
ran round the walls of the apartment; while on a
massive table was spread a sumptuous collation,
with many flagons of rich wine, and tall Venetian
glasses, among rich meats and vases full of the
dewy flowers of that rare southern clime. There
were no tenants to this splendid hall, but from a
door that faced the staircase, which had been partially
left open, there came the mingled sounds of
more than one sweet low toned female voice; and
once or twice a long soft thrilling laugh, that
seemed to speak a heart at ease and happy. These
sounds were followed, just as the Rover led his
prisoner into that noble hall, by a light air touched
exquisitely on a lute, and accompanied by a
rich clear melodious voice of a girl singing. Her
execution was admirable—her tones thrilled to
the very heart like liquid fire—but alas! the song
was so passionately, painfully voluptuous, that it
could have flowed from no modest lips, and should
have been listened to by no modest ears. Pierced
to the soul, Teresa faltered, and stood still—but
Ringwood with a strong pressure of her arm, and
a stern whisper of his deep penetrating voice, saying,
“Beware! I say, beware, Teresa,” half led,
half bore her onward to the door whence came
those hateful sounds. He threw it open, and the
sight she saw, struck that unhappy girl,—more
than the most dreadful of the dread scenes she
had already witnessed—with agony and terror and
despair.

CHAPTER IX.

The room to which Teresa was thus unwillingly
introduced, was of dimensions somewhat
smaller than the hall or armory on which it opened,
but far more graceful and luxurious in its decorations.
Its casements, although high and spacious,
and admirably calculated to admit every
breath of air that might be stirring, were completely
closed against the garish light by deep
Italian awnings of peach colored damask, striped
with broad silver arabesques, through which the
rays stole softly, mellowed to the same tender
hue. The walls were hung with Genoa velvet
of the same delicate color, divided into panels
by rich frames of Venetian fillagree in silver—

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the very floor was strewn with carpets of the
same material—mirrors were every where in
bright profusion, curtained with gauzy veils of
the faintest pink—couches and ottomans of down,
with covers of soft silk—tables and cabinets of
marquetry and buhl completed the furniture of
this voluptuous bower, the very atmosphere of
which like the haunts, fabled by Grecian bards,
of that Cytherean goddess, reeked by the perfumes
redolent of love. But if the chamber and
its decorations were in themselves luxurious almost
beyond description, what words can paint
the charms almost unearthly, the Aphrodisian air,
the prodigal voluptuousness of its inmates? They
were but three in number—three young and
splendid girls, all in the very flower and flush of
young ripe womanhood—all beautiful—but oh!
how different in their beauty.

The first—she it was whose rich clear voice
had reached Teresa's ear before she entered—
was a rare specimen of that peculiar style of
English loveliness, which, save to the voluptuary,
is rendered far less lovely by the predominance
in all its traits essential to intellectual thought—
and yet she was indeed most beautiful. Her forehead,
though rather low than otherwise, was
whiter than the virgin snow-wreath, before the
soft west wind has thawed its dazzling purity,
and smooth as it was white—her delicately penciled
brows o'er-arched a pair of large soft eyes
swimming in liquid light—her nose was delicate
and small, her lips of the richest crimson, wooingly
prominent, disclosed a set of teeth so pearly
and transparent in their lustre, that they set
simile at naught. Her hair, of the lightest and
the most shining brown, was all disheveled as it
seemed—but, in truth, trained most artfully to
fall and float in a thousand wreaths of silky ringlets,
over her neck and shoulders, and far below
her waist, shrouding her as with a golden glory.
But exquisite as were her features, they yet were
nothing in comparison to her unrivaled symmetry
of person—the plump and rounded neck wreathed
to and fro with many a swanlike motion, the soft
full arch of her superbly falling shoulders, the
swell of the fair bosom, even now in her fresh
girlhood luxuriant and mature, with myriads of
fine azure veins meandering about its glowing surface—
the slender waist scarcely confined by the
slight silver zone which gathered in the folds of
the white gauzy lawn that scarcely veiled her
bust, leaving her shoulders and round dimpled
arms all unencumbered; the wavy outlines of her
form, indicated by the fall of the thick heavy drapery
of azure silk that flowed from her waist
downward, to the earth, suffering only the extremity
of one small foot decked with a sil
ver sandal to peep out modestly beneath the
hem.

Such was the foremost of the fair tenants of the
room, who met the cold indignant eye of the
young prisoner, as she leaned negligently on a
pile of satin cushions, warbling the amatory air
which had so shocked Teresa; not that there was
any touch of grossness or indecency in the words,
which, the more fatally seductive for that very
want, breathed the full soul of passion blended
with sentiment and pathos—but that the singer
threw into every tone and accent a manner so voluptuous,
an expression so entirely sensual, that,
to an ear not yet corrupted into sin, the effect was
painful and disgusting.

The second damsel was a tall slender Persian,
with the warm dusky hue of her country's complexion
on her soft velvet skin, a faint rich flush
peering out upon either cheek, like the first touch
of young Aurora's pencil upon the waving nightclouds—
her eyes, fringed by long silky lashes,
dark, deep and swimming, now melted into a
sleepy languor, now flashed out with intolerable
lustre—her hair, black as the raven's wing, was
twisted into a mass of little spiral curls, and
decked with chainwork ornaments of gold, a glittering
amulet all set with sapphires of rare price
laying by either ear. Her dress, too, was no less
dissimilar to that of the fair beauty, than was the
style of her loveliness; yet, though no portion of
her flesh was visible, except the face and hands
and a small part of the throat, it yet displayed
her person, scarcely in a less degree than did that
of her companion which left her bosom, shoulders
and arms almost entirely bare. She wore a close
cymar or jacket of bright yellow satin, all flowered
with sprigs of gold, and buttoned up in front
with studs of chrysolite; below the zone, she was
clothed in loose trowsers of gold-sprigged Indian
muslin, with heavy golden bangles, all hung with
glittering bells, about her ankles, and light gilded
slippers on her small shapely feet. There was,
perhaps, even more of beauty in the movements,
in the exceeding grace, in the air, the manner of
this oriental fair one, than in her personal charms,
as she danced lightly to and fro, bending her slight
shape into many a strange and graceful posture,
waving her arms, whose every gesture was perfection,
and swaying all her limbs with an exquisite
freedom, her golden bells chiming the while
in time to the words of the singer, and the tones
of the lute or gittern which the third girl—a tall
black-browed Italian—was striking with rare
skill, uttering ever and anon one of those low
toned happy laughs, which should have told of an
innocent heart at ease, but which alas announced
no more than heartless levity. The tresses of the

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lute player, though black as the bright Persian's
ringlets, were as different from them in their nature
and disposition as any things can be—even
the most dissimilar—for they were parted evenly
upon her forehead, and flowed down quite uncurled
in long and wavy masses, actually resting in
loose coils upon the velvet floor-cloth, as she sat
near the English girl on a low ottoman, with her
back to a great Venetian mirror, which reflected
the contour of all her sloping shoulders down
nearly to the waist.

Such was the scene—such the companions—to
which the buccaneer now introduced his captive.
For a moment, so soft were the carpets of the armory,
and so light had been the footsteps of the
new comers—for a moment the girls continued
their occupations, unconscious that they were
overlooked by any mortal eye—but when, after a
meaning pause of a second's space, and a threatening
glance at Teresa, Ringwood advanced a
step or two, the Persian dancer raised her head
from one of her low bending attitudes, and catching
sight of her stately lord, uttered a shrill cry
of surprise, and bounded forward like an antelope
to meet him; quick, however, as were her movements,
she was nevertheless outstripped by the
fair beauty, who, being seated nearer the door,
sprung up the moment she head the outcry of the
other and was in the embrace of the buccaneer
with the speed of light, winding her beautiful
bare arms about his noble person, pressing her
panting bosom close to his mighty chest, and
pouring a flood of sweet burning kisses on his
brow, eyes, and mouth; uttering all the time a
low soft murmur, all eloquent of eager passion,
and blushing so profusely with excitement, that
all her neck and bosom, seen clearly through the
thin gauze of her boddice, were crimsoned by the
torrent of hot blood, that coursed through every
vein of her whole body like streams of burning
lava. Nor was the pirate chieftain slow or reluctant
to return her passionate caress, but clapsed
her in a long embrace. After a minute, however,
he released her, reluctant as it seemed. And
there amid those sirens, as beautiful as either,
but, oh! how different in her calm, innocent, pure
loveliness, scarce conscious of her own exquisite
attractions, and all unsunned by any tinge of noon-day
passion, from their unmaidenly beauty, which
actually pained the feelings though it might fit
the eye and rivet the mere senses of the beholder,
stood the sad Spanish maiden. At first she gazed
in mute astonishment, unable to conceive the possibility
of aught so boldly passionate, as the blonde
beauty's rapture—but gradually, as she felt her
own heart bound too fiercely in her bosom, and
her own pulses throb, she knew not wherefore;
she let her eyes sink to the carpet, and stood all
breathless and dismay, blushes and paleness chasing
each other over her speaking lineaments, like
the alternate lights and shadows, which sweep in
autumn days over some lovely landscape. The
slave-girl all the time gazed with dilated eyes
that seemed to drink in all that passed before
them—without, however, comprehending anything;
clinging with one hand to the velvet cloak
which partly shrouded the form of her pale mistress,
and trembling wildly between fear and admiration.

When this strange scene had ended, Ringwood
turned toward his prisoner, and taking her by the
hand said, while a cold convulsive shudder shook
her whole form—

“These lovely girls, Teresa, shall be your future
comrades—this bower of bliss shall be your
dwelling. Pleasure shall wait your very wish;
luxury, such as no human heart has ever dreamed
of, shall lull you to your slumbers; not an air of
heaven shall visit your brow too roughly; and
your whole life shall glide away like one soft
dream of rapture. Bella, my fair-haired beauty,
welcome your new companion, choose her a boudoir
near your own—fit her with garments such
as your own rare taste may choose, and her rare
beauty justify, and above all,” he added, lowering
his voice to a tender whisper, “be not thou
jealous, rare one; for if I seek to win her to my
will, it is not any thing for love, but all for vengeance!
and now, farewell, sweet sirens all,” he
added, speaking once more aloud, “and let me
find you, my Teresa, happy as these fair creatures
when I revisit you to-morrow.”

“Oh no!” she cried, in vehement impetuous
tones, that would not brook control even of reason,
“oh no! no! no! Leave me not here,
leave me not here, with these! No, better, better
far to languish in the deepest dungeon; to writhe
in untold agonies; to share the slenderest pittance
of the most wretched innocent slave, than live in
plenty thus, with wanton guilt, and barefaced infamy
for comrades! Slay me, then, slay me with
agonies protracted, as you will, cast me forth to
the beasts of the forest, tear my limbs joint from
joint, but leave me not with these.”

“Teresa,” he said, speaking in a low but distinct
voice, with fearful emphasis, “Teresa, I
have sworn, and you well know how deeply, and
with how deep a cause! Now mark me, one thing
I have remitted to you, in one thing have I pardoned;
tempt me no farther, I beseech you.”

“O, slay me! slay me, rather”—she frantically
interrupted him.

“I will,” said he, “I will, by heaven! if you
say any more about it; but not as you suppose—

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I will, Teresa, I will cast you forth if you provoke
me any farther; but not to the wild beasts
of the forest! By Him that lives! tigers and
sharks are merciful compared with those to whom
I will abandon you! Hark to that shout of revelry
and riot! they shall enjoy the charms,
which you would keep so charily! in the rack of
their barbarous embraces shall your frame writhe
with anguish! by their hands shall your limbs be
torn joint from joint! Three days I give you,
but three days! to yield you wholly to my will;
or beyond doubt it shall be done to you as I have
spoken!”

With an air of proud defiance, tossing her long
black locks from her pale forehead, her bosom
panting, and her eyes flashing as if with a prophetic
inspiration, she raised her head, which had
drooped on her bosom, and shook her finger, menacingly,
at the great Rover.

“And I tell thee,” she said, in clear and liquid
tones—they were like the blast of a silver trumpet,
“and I tell thee, that ere three days, thou
shalt be called to thine account—be it for good or
evil!”

“Then!” answered he, bursting into an uncontrollable
fit of fury, “then! by my Maker! to
thine shalt thou precede me!” and he made a
step forward as if to seize her by the arm; when
the Italian girl, and the gay Persian dancer rushed
between, and entangling him in their caresses,
hung round his sinewy frame, like honeysuckles
wreathing their sweet tendrils about some giant
oak; while at the same moment the fair-haired
Bella laid her hand on the Spanish maiden's
shoulder, with a delicate respectful pressure, and
in a soft voice whispered blandly—

“Oh! irritate him not, oh! irritate him not,
dear lady—for although, when he is himself, none
are more noble-hearted, none are more generous
and kind, none are more gentle, yet when the
paroxysm is upon him, he is the slave of fifty
furious demons, his own unchained passions, to
which the fiends themselves were powerless and
tame! oh! irritate him not; and all may yet be
well; and see, he smiles,” she added, quite disregarding
the air of bitter scorn with which Teresa
met her soft and disinterested advances; and casting
herself in the way of the Rover with the conscious
air of a favorite, she threw her arms about
his neck, and stopped the words he seemed about
to utter by a long ardent kiss, whispering in his
ear as she did so, “Heed her not now, she will
be tamer soon—consider she is but fresh caged;
and even singing birds will dash themselves
against the bars of their fresh cages, even although
those bars be gilded!” and she uttered a low
sweet merry laugh; which, though in truth both
the action which preceded it, and the laugh itself
originated in the best and tenderest motives,
struck upon the breast of Teresa, as the height of
cold unfeeling heartlessness.

The Rover laughed, as he returned the fair
girl's kiss.

“Well, be it so, beautiful Bella—be it so, if
you will:” and then, stooping down, he whispered
a sentence in her ear. None heard it but she—
and, pushing him gently to the door, cried, “Oh,
yes! I will remember: and now go—Reginald,
now go!”

Nothing more was said for the moment; and,
turning quietly away, the Rover left the room,
closing the door behind him—releasing Teresa
from the dread, which, when he rushed toward
her, despite her dauntless courage, had shaken
her every nerve.

He had not, however, quitted the apartment a
minute, before Bella again approached the maiden—
an air of calm compassion sitting serenely on
her lovely features; and laying her white hand,
which showed like snow itself for the contrast,
upon the darker complexion of Teresa's arm—

“Come, lady, come with me,” she said, almost
humbly. “Come to my private bower, and we
will seek for some attire less unbecoming. With
me you will be safe, and can take some repose,
of which I judge it certain you must stand in need
very greatly.”

But the proud virgin shook off the caressing
hand as if contamination had been in its slightest
pressure, and shrunk back from her consolation
with an air of absolute horror.

“Pray, shrink not from me thus,” the English
girl exclaimed, in accents that told forcibly the
depth of her emotions, her face again covered
with a deep, deep blush, far different from the
hot crimson color that had suffused her whole
complexion at the words of her lover.

“Nay, shrink not from me thus, dear lady:
contamination lies not in the mere touch, even of
the violet. It is the mind which, alone, pollutes;
and God, he knows that, be I what I may myself,
I would not teach vice to another—no! not to be
virtuous again myself, which I can never be, nor
pure as I once was. Nor yet too much despise
us: for, be sure, lady, that as thou art now, we
were all once; as innocent, as pure, as noble; and
be not too sure, lady, proud though thou be, and
pure as unsunned snow, and strong in purity—be
not too sure that thou be not in a few days as we
now are!”

“Never—Oh no! by my own soul, no! never!”
answered Teresa, eagerly, but in a manner much
mollified by her companion's manner.

“Be not too sure!” Bella responded. “Honor

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is dear, indeed—dearer than life to the innocent—
but life is very sweet; and death, under the tortures,
very awful: and if, by losing life, we may
not save our honor—”

“Then better die dishonored!”—Teresa interrupted
her—“but though I hear your words, I
scarcely comprehend their purport!”

“Like enough, lady!—like enough! and may
you never do so—but I believe you will. For
you will learn that this same honor, for which
you would die willingly, may be rent from you,
living, by the brute violence, not of one noble-minded,
although erring, soldier, but of a thousand
brutal desperadoes—and that you may not
die till all, even the loathsome blacks, are sated,
and then die horribly—oh! horribly.—Better, perhaps,
comply, than suffer thus.”

“Besides,” continued the other, as if she had
scarcely heard the Spanish maiden's words—“Besides,
if he so will it, without force he can win
you. No man's arm, and no woman's heart ever
successfully opposed, when he was resolute in
earnest—the fixed and overwhelming will of
Reginald. Lady, before three days, if he so will
it you shall dote on him unto adoration.”

“You know not what you say,” answered the
Spaniard firmly, but no longer with any vehemence
of passion in her tones. “I love another.”

“Ha! is it so?” replied Bella.—“Is it so?
then, indeed, it may be, you shall not fall: for
had I loved another then, as I love now, surely I
had endured all sooner!”

“And do you then—do you in truth love this
dread being?” said Teresa, strong interest overpowering
the disgust which she had felt to her
frail companion. “Do you indeed love—you,
who seem so soft and gentle—this merciless, this
fiend-like Rover?”

“For what then do you take me?” exclaimed
Bella, looking full in the eyes of Teresa, with as
proud and haughty an air as she had lately met,
“with all my mind, and heart, and spirit!—think
you an English lady, though she may stoop for
love to be Pirate's leman, would feign love which
she felt not? With my whole mind, and heart,
and spirit, I worship, I adore him! In his love—
in his life—I alone have my being—when he dies
I shall not survive him!—it is enough—trust
to me; you have naught to fear—neither harm to
your person, nor pollution to your mind—come to
my bower, and I will speak with you more fully.”

The Spanish girl, who for a moment, dignified
as she was, and proud, and haughty, had actually
quailed before the fiery and surpassing pride of
the pirate's paramour, now feeling perhaps that
she had something wronged her in her thoughts;
and at all events experiencing a melting of the
heart toward one who although frail was kind to
her and very gentle, and who might have some
palliation of her crime in the peculiar circumstances
of her sad tale, answered no farther, but
took her proffered hand in silence, and leaning on
her shoulder, for she was fast becoming very
weak, retired to the beauty's boudoir.

CHAPTER X.

The day passed over, as all days must, in its
appointed time, whether of joy or sorrow, and the
great sun went down upon the pirate's hold, as
peacefully as on the shepherd's hut, all bright and
blessing, and one by one the stars came out in
their set places, and the broad moon arose—a ball
of liquid silver.

The day passed over—but through its weary
hours, though trembling at each distant footstep,
and shuddering at every voice, Teresa heard no
more, saw no more, of the dreaded Rover; and
as she learned by slow degrees to forget—if not to
forgive—the frailty of her lovely hostess in her
compassionate kindness; and as hour after hour
glided by, and naught occurred to wake new apprehension,
the tension of her nerves, strong preternaturally
by the intense and terrible excitement
of the scenes in which she had so lately
borne a part so prominent, was gradually softened
down; her tears flowed, not convulsively, but in
a tranquil stream which ever seemed to relieve
her burning brain from one half of its fiery burthen—
she now wept not for herself alone—and
even that rather from nervous irritation, than that
she had appreciated her position—but for her tortured,
butchered brother—for her unhappy parent—
for, more than all beside—her true, her own
dear Amadis! Nor did she only weep!—she
prayed—prayed purely, fervently, with strong
affectionate unwavering faith, for strength—that
only real strength—the strength which cometh
from on high—to bear in calm humility, in Christian
fortitude, whatever might be sent to her by
Him, who sendeth all his gifts, whether of joy
or sorrow, wisely and well, and—though we,
thoughtlesss and hard-hearted, believe it not to be
so—for our eternal good! She prayed—and rose
up from her bended knees—as all will rise, who
do pray fervently, and purely, and with faith—
refreshed and comforted in spirit, and strengthened
with an inward hope, surpassing any confidence
of earth, in a strong Rescuer on high. She rose
up, braver than she had knelt down, and with a
better courage; for it was not based on her own
vain confidence of heart, and stubborn purpose,
but in the love of Him who slumbereth not, nor

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sleepeth, nor overlooketh the least hair that is
rent from the head of his most humble worshiper.

She rose up, as we have said, comforted and
strengthened—she washed, and braided her disordered
locks, and clad herself in the most modest
garments of her fair entertainer; she ate and
drank, and laid her down in her pure unsunned innocence,
beside that bright but erring being,
whose very virtues had been melted down by the
uncurbed indulgence of ungovernable passions,
into voluptuous vice, and slept as soundly and as
sweetly as the young happy infant cradled upon
its mother's bosom. While long, long after she
had sunk to rest, the fair-haired beauty watched
every long drawn breath, and almost wept, she
knew not why, over the calm unconscious sleeper—
till when the night had far advanced toward
morning, she started, as if into remembrance from
a sudden dream; and, rising from Teresa's side,
thrust her small snowy feet into a pair of fairy
slippers, drew a large robe of velvet about her
shapely limbs, and stole away, nor returned any
more to her own bower, until the tropical sun was
high already in the clear firmament.

That day the Rover came not nigh Teresa, for
in the fort without, and in the circular basin, all
was now bustle and hot haste. During the night
two more feluccas, which had been detached from
the rest upon some distant cruise, had been warped
into the harbor and found berths beside their
consorts, and all the morning long all hands were
actively employed refitting them for instant service—
water casks were rolled out, and filled, and
hoisted in again; and biscuit, and rich meats, and
fragrant wines, and arms, and ammunition, and
fresh men, embarked with emulous haste. At
noon, as the two girls might see from Bella's
bower—for having, though half reluctant, and
half doubtful of her own liberty to do so, become
in some degree conciliated to that kind although
guilty creature, Teresa would no more consent to
quit her private chamber; nor to seek any more
intercourse with those who, although in truth no
more guilty than the English girl, yet seemed so
to her eyes already influenced—alas! weak mortals!—
by some small show of kindness—at noon,
as the two girls might see from Bella's bower—a
council was held within the ramparts of the keep,
of all the pirate leaders; and, shortly after the
drum beat to arms; and all the buccaneers assembled,
and fell into their ranks, a gay and gorgeous
host, numbering at least twelve hundred practiced
warriors.

After a brief inspection by the great buccaneer
himself, eight hundred were detailed, and instantly
embarked in the two last arrived feluccas, and
all the vessels of the other squadron, saving
alone the largest barque—Ringwood's own flag
ship—and the small sloop or tender which lay
moored by the water-gate. Within an hour at
furthest, the last of this gallant squadron, detached,
as it was evident, on some peculiar duty,
disappeared behind a dense mass of trees which
veiled the outlet of the harbor; and so strong was
the current of the river which leaped up there at
once, a giant from its birth, that in less than two
hours more they were all out at sea with their
sails set to the stiff breeze, ploughing the billows
merrily.

With them, however, we go not on their path
of rapine—their sails were spread, and their masts
bent to the morning blast, and their lean bows
cleft with a sound of laughter the blue waves.
But no eye from the pirate's hold could mark
them, though many a heart beat eager with anticipation.
When they were out of sight, after some
short parade and manning of the guns, Ringwood
dismissed his men; and with his arms folded upon
his bosom, and his proud head depressed as though
in melancholy thought, strolled for some time in
a listless mood about the esplanade of the fort, and
then withdrew quietly to his own turret chamber,
where none—not his most intimate associates—
not his most trusted officers—ever presumed to
break upon his solitude—and there remained all
moody and alone, till the sun had already plunged
his lower limb into the deep and tufted foliage of the
surrounding forest. Just at that time, however, as
the land breeze began to die away, and a faint
languid calm succeeded, before the setting in of
the fresher breath of the free ocean—a dull, deep,
heavy sound—a sort of rumbling and continuous
roar was heard by the watchers on the bastions;
and while they were yet wondering what those
hoarse notes might mean, the Rover stood among
them—

“Ordnance!” he said—“and heavy ordnance!—
man all the batteries, load, and run out the guns;
see you have linstocks ready, and fire at hand to
light them.”

And, although many doubted that those far sounds
were indeed guns—none disobeyed his orders!
none hesitated for a moment—and ere long it was
proved how perfect was the ear, how accurate the
judgment of the great English Rover—for as the
sea breeze freshened, and blew strong, it bore
upon its dewy breath the sharp reports of many a
single cannon, of many a long continuous volley.
At last the sounds died off, and seemed to melt
into the distance, and pass entirely away—but
again, just as it grew quite dark, before the moon
had risen, or the stars yet come out, the cannonading
was renewed, closer, as it seemed, than

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before; and after a brief furious battle, a crimson
glare rushed up the deep blue sky; and so continued,
wavering now—now flashing fiery bright,
for nigh an hour of time; then a keen stream, or
column rather, of white light shot up toward the
zenith with a dull heavy shock; a shower of sparks
fell seaward, and all was dark and silent. All
that night long torches were blazing and guards
pacing the stone bastions, and blue lights dimly
burning in all the trenches of the outer works.
Nay, more, the guns were manned even in the citadel
itself, and in the Rover's keep—and all those
tedious hours with ear, heart, eye on the alert,
Teresa watched and prayed in the strong hope of
coming succor. Both vessels in the harbor were
full manned and all in battle order—but, though
all hearts were burning, all arms high strung
against the foe, though Reginald himself waked to
devise fresh means of desperate defence, half
doubting that his consorts were cut off, and two-thirds
of his men destroyed, for well he knew no
one would yield him captive—no foe appeared—
nor friend. The chirpings and hummings of the
innumerable insect tribes—the croak of the countless
reptiles, mixed with the chatter of the nighthawk
and the rich melody of an occasional mocking
bird, were the only sounds that waked the
night echoes of the Florida forest, except the
watchword and the tramp of the stern sentinel.

Just as day dawned, commanding the small
sloop to slip her cable, and with a picked and veteran
crew of twenty English sailors, to drop
down cautiously and reconnoitre, Ringwood departed
from the busy ramparts; and, for the first
time, since the stormy scene which had ensued
on Teresa's introduction, turned toward the bower.
He lingered not, however, there; when he found
none within its gorgeous precincts save the Italian
girl, and the soft Persian dancer, though each tried
her most choice allurements to detain him; but
passed, after a few short moments, into the bower
of his English favorite.

“Ha! Bella,” he said, as he entered, “my sweet
Bella,” and a touch of real fondness was audible
in his rich accents—“and thou, Teresa, nay! nay!
start not, nor look so wildly, lady—I come not to
alarm, much less to harm you; sit, fair one, and
fear nothing. Now, Bella, dearest, I have watched
all night long, and am fatigued and faint, bid your
slave girls bring forth their dainties, I come to
break my fast in your sweet company, and spend
a tranquil hour,” and with the words he cast his
splendid figure at length upon a satin ottoman on
the side of the chamber farthest from Teresa, in
an attitude of the most perfect grace and majesty,
and remained for some seconds without speaking,
a grave and even sorrowful expression pervading
his expressive lineaments. After a few moments,
raising his eyes to Teresa's face, he perceived that
the bland air of dismay, almost despair, still sat
upon her pallid features; and that with lips apart,
nostrils dilated, and eyes rigidly set and glaring,
she gazed upon his features, as if she therein
thought to read her doom.

“Fear nothing now from me,” he again said, in
a voice singularly mild and witching. “Fear nothing
now from me, Teresa. The fire has gone
out here,” and he laid his broad hand on his brow,
“and if you fan it not by any heedless folly, will
sleep, perchance, forever. The fiend of memory
is for awhile at rest; see that you wake it not to
phrensy! nay, wonder not, nor start at my words,
either. If I have sinned much, I have suffered
much, and many of my sins have been the rank
fruit of those very sufferings. But a truce now to
this; my word is pledged to you, that you shall
undergo no violence. My word, girl, inviolate
yet—see that you stir me not to any reckless fit——
when reason yields the sins to memory, to weakness
and revenge! Teresa, fear me not!”

“I fear you not,” she answered, half timidly,
half reassured by his strangely altered manner,
“though I have mighty cause to fear you, yet I
do not!”

“So you shall have no cause—daring myself, I
love the daring and undaunted, even when they
defy me! sin-stained myself and passion-blighted,
I yet admire the innocent and pure. Dauntless I
do know you, Teresa!—for had you not been so,
long hence had your dishonored carcass glutted
the dog-fish and the shark, and pure I do believe
you! were it not, I say, for memory and pride, I
might even now release you.”

“Oh! do! do!” she exclaimed, “do so; and
God will bless you; your sins, though red as
scarlet, shall become white as snow; your rapines
and your crimes shall all be pardoned you;
a grateful virgin's prayers shall rise up nightly
for your weal, shall win the grace of the Eternal,
shall shield your head in battle, that not a hair of
it shall perish, and more, far more, than with a
self-approving conscience, shall crown your days
with bliss, and steep your nights in quiet. Do so,
and on your bed of death a weak girl's voice of
gratitude shall smooth your thorny pillow—her
father's—”

“Ha!—no more!—Peace! on your life, no
more!” cried Ringwood, fiercely interrupting her,
as he half started from the couch whereon he was
reclining, at the mere mention of the man, whom
he indeed had so deep cause to execrate; though
but a little while before he had seemed on the
point of yielding to her prayers. Teresa, nerved
with the hope of winning him, would have replied;

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and by so doing would probably have once more
roused him into a burst of savage and ungovernable
fury, but as her lips moved to answer, Bella,
who had been absent for a moment with her handmaids,
fortunately returned, and laying her hand
on Teresa's shoulder, pressed it so strongly, that
she looked up, and then she laid her fingers to her
own mouth with a grave smile, and changed the
subject by addressing Ringwood with some slight
question of no moment.

Meantime the board was spread with dainties,
choice fruits, and savory meats, and snowy bread,
and the enchanting wines of Southern Europe, in
bowls of porcelain and crystal, dishes embossed
with gold, and flasks engraved by the unequaled
chisel of Cellini; and Ringwood led, strange guests!
the fair-haired Bella, and that stern innocent Spanish
virgin, to seats beside him; and played the
host with such unrivaled courtesy, such proud
humility in every accent of his rich, deep, manly
voice, such dignity and grace in every free unstudied
gesture, that even Teresa was won for a
space from her gloomy abstraction, and to her
own astonishment—when she reflected on it afterward—
found herself wondering at—almost admiring—
the chivalrous and dignified demeanor of
the fierce Pirate.

Before the meal was well concluded, one of the
slave girls who attended, came with a hasty step
from the armory, announcing that Pluto and another
black awaited the Rover's leisure.

“What other black—my midnight beauty?”
exclaimed the Rover, laughing, “His fellow Charon,
is it?”

“His name Antonio, massa—who sell us fruit
and fish from his pirogue.”

“Ha!” cried the Rover, “Ha!—” and mused
a moment, and stepped out into the gorgeous vestibule,
decked with its glittering arms, leaving
the door behind him open, so that the girls could
hear every word that passed.

“What! is it you, Antonio—what brings you
here, and whence?”

“From Key West, massa, last, with plenty
fine fresh turtle—they in my pirogue, down below,
so heavy we can't warp him up!”

“Key West—what of our squadron then? you
must have met it.”

“Certain! replied the negro, “I met'em, and
told massa Cunninghame of Spanish fleet in the
offing—seven merchant galliots and one caravel!
Then massa Cunninghame set sail till he fell
within them, and hoisted English color—and then
ran!”

“Ran?” cried the Rover, “ran!”

“Yes, he ran, massa Ringwood, till they all
chased him, and got scattered, then he turned
round and fought; and when the caravel took
ground not fifty fathom from the inlet, he left her
hard and fast, and chased the galliots, and took
two—and then his squadron all came back, and
battered the war-ship and burned her quite, and
sacked the galliots and then seuttled them and
then went off in chase again after five others—
long chase, but still I guess he catch 'era!”

“Ha! well done, Cunninghame! brave Cunninghame!
brave Cunninghame!” exclaimed the
Rover, “take that for thy news, fellow,” giving
him as he spoke two or three Spanish dollars.
“I must away and call the men from the felucca,
and the batteries; they list not service unless it
be strictly needed. What wouldst thou more,
my good fellow?”

“So please you, send four hands in his canoe,
help poor Antonio up with big pirogue: have
plenty fat turtle and fresh fruit to-night.”

“Well, see to it, Pluto!” and with the words
entirely deceived by the intelligence he had received,
and lulled into confidence that his crews
were victorious, the Rover hurried down, and
called off all his men save the two wonted sentinels
upon the bastions, and the two watchmen in
his own felucca; revoked his orders to the sloop
which had already moved toward the outlet; and
ordering an extra supply of wines, in compensation
of their recent toils, to all the buccaneers,
gave himself up to dreams of complete triumph.
An hour or two elapsed and Antonio's pirogue
came up, manned in addition to its usual crew by
four of the Rover's trustiest men, who reported
all still and peaceful in the outlet, and was moored
inside the large felucca, close to the shingly beach
below the batteries. Her deck load of fruit and
fish was soon got ashore, her hatches battened
down, and herself, as it seemed, left vacant and
unguarded, while her black crew, consisting only
of two boys in addition to Antonio, went ashore
with the Rover's men to join in their accustomed
revelings and riots.

Night fell; and though for a little while licentious
songs, loud shouts of mirthful laughter, and
many a sound of wild ungoverned mirth rung
through the guarded esplanade, long before midnight
not an eye was awake in the ships, on the
ramparts, in the dwellings, or in the Rover's keep,
so heavily were the buccaneers exhausted by the
strange mixture of fatigue and feasting which had
characterized the last four days—save those of
the four sentinels, two in the barque, and one on
either bastion, and of the sad Teresa, who, waking
from a perturbed and dreamy sleep, had missed
her fair companion—for she, as on the former
night, had stolen from her couch unnoticed—and
now stood gazing from her high lattice over the

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lovely scene below, which lay all glimmering out
in the indistinct light of the happy moon, half
lustre and half shadow.

CHAPTER XI.

As she gazed down upon the moonlit esplanade,
Teresa saw a tall dark figure creep out with catlike
stealthy tread from beneath the verandah of
the large building nearest to the sea; and, keeping
itself with great care inside the darkest shadows,
drag itself inch by inch toward the stone bastion
at the right hand termination of the battery;
whereon she clearly saw the pirate sentinel stalking
his solitary round upon the rampart, the long
bright barrel of his shouldered harquebuse glancing
like silver in the moon light. At first she gazed
with simple wonder, wholly unmixed with curiosity
or interest, upon the movements of the dark
shadowy form; but suddenly, as he crossed a
streak of moonshine, it struck her with the speed
of light that his was a well known figure; and instantly
a train of recollections, all hitherto forgotten,
flashed on her—the name Antonio—the voice,
now well-remembered of the unseen messenger—
it was—it must be! the black fisherman, the
trusted guide and hunter of her loved Amadis!
She now strained all her eyes, her heart, her spirit,
to mark what was his progress, not doubting for
a moment that ere long she would be set free,
whether by death or rescue—while she had been
engaged, brief as they were, in these imaginations,
she had lost sight for a moment or two of the dark
gliding figure; and when she turned her eyes
again toward the spot, it was no longer visible;
and, what seemed stranger yet, the pirate sentinel
no longer paced the bastion, although his comrade
could be distinctly seen leaning against an angle
near the sallyport, by which Teresa had gained
entrance, at the further end of the lines. Suspecting,
more than ever, now that something great
was on the point of happening, she gazed yet more
intently; yet nothing might she see of him, whom
she believed, with all the confidence of youth and
inexperience, to be a friend and rescuer within
the pirate's hold. Tired at length with watching
the long line of vacant ramparts, she looked again
toward the sleeping soldier, and as she did so,
from the dark shadow of the ravelin and trench
she saw a coal black figure leap, with the blithe
and muscular action of a tiger bounding upon his
prey, on the unconscious pirate—something bright
flashed once or twice aloft in the clear moonshine,
and the struggle was ended in a moment, the hapless
sentinel falling a scarce less conscious victim
to his swift secret foe.

A moment more, and the victor had donned the
scarlet watch cloak of his fallen enemy, and was
now boldly traversing the whole line of the esplanade,
stopping and stooping down for a moment
or two at regular intervals, while a faint clinking
sound, heard indistinctly from the distance, gave
note, even to the inexperienced ear of Teresa, that
he was engaged in spiking all the cannon. After
this task was ended, disencumbering himself of
the watch cloak, he crept down to the water's
edge, and plunging into the calm basin swam
straight for his pirogue, swung himself by a rope
to the deck, and for several minutes' space was
lost to the anxious gaze of the Spanish maiden.

He re-appeared at last, however, from the hold,
accompanied by ten or twelve men, whom by their
corslets and steel caps, and the long barrels of
their Spanish muskets, she knew at once to be
Castilian soldiers—within a moment they had
lowered away the pinnace, which hung at the pirogue's
stern, and entering it, pulled openly across
the basin toward the Rover's barque; the sentinels
on which, seeing that their boat came directly
as it appeared to them, from the water-gate of the
fortress, hailed not, nor uttered any challenge, but
suffered the pinnace to come to under her very
stern, and her crew to scale her bulwark unopposed;
all of which Teresa might behold distinctly
by clear moonlight. What farther passed she
knew not; but in a little while she saw a bright
light shown from the windows in the stern, and
at the same time the vessel began to swing round
slowly so as to bring her broadside, which had so
lately borne full on the entrance of the basin, to
cover the dwellings of the buccaneers.

For a little while longer she watched steadfastly
the basin and the vessels, but nothing took
place any more, although she staid beside the
lattice till the moon set behind the tree-tops, and
deep darkness settled down over the glimmering
prospect. Then fancying that nothing would take
place that night, and fearing lest Bella might return
and find her watching, she turned away and
walked toward her couch. In doing so, however,
she passed another casement, which looked out
toward the forest in the rear; on which side, fearless
of any sudden onslaught, and confiding in the
remoteness of their station, surrounded as it was
by forests, everglades, impenetrable hammocks,
and morasses—pathless save to the wandering
Indian—the pirates kept no watch; and, as she
passed it, another sight flashed on her eyes, even
more wonderful as it appeared to her, than aught
she had yet witnessed—a long and regular line of
dull red sparks, not larger than the luminous firefly
of that region, and scarce so brilliant, were
winding round the outer side of the ditch, which

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circled all the rear of the position. Suddenly, at
one point, they clustered close together, and then
descended, as it seemed, into the deep wet fosse.
Then! then! her very soul on the alert, for she
had seen and heard enough of warfare to know
that those dull sparks were kindled matches of a
long line of musqueteers, she threw the lattice
open; and leaning out into the dewy night air,
listened intently—nor did she listen long, before
the grating of a saw was clearly audible; although
by no means loud enough to wake a sleeper; or
scarce, perhaps, to rouse the dull perceptions of
an uninterested watcher—after a time the sound
was heard no more, and very soon the little lights
might be seen, one by one, emerging from the
hither side, and forming in close order within the
esplanade, which they had actually entered all
unmolested and unseen, save by a friendly eye—
and now Teresa knew that friends were close at
hand, and rescue almost certain. Yet now she
trembled more than in her hour of peril, and was
so shaken in her every nerve, that when she
kneeled to pray and offer up her tribute of thanks-giving,
her tongue refused its office, her senses
failed her, and she sank fainting on the velvet
carpet, so that she saw, rest as she might, or any
other, who had gazed seaward from that height,
almost at the same point of time wherein the
footman passed the palisades, the tall white sails
of a huge Spanish caravella, steal ghost-like
through the shadows of the trees that fringed the
outlet, towed by a dozen boats pulled noiselessly
with muffled oars, into the middle of the basin.
Another—and another—and yet another followed;
and, strange to tell! though no slight noise attended
their proceedings, they, with the captured
barque of Ringwood, were moored within half
pistol shot of the batteries, the guns of which were
all, as has been seen, spiked and so rendered useless,
their cannon bearing full on the defenceless
dwellings of the buccaneers, and their boats ready
to land with their armed crews at a moment's
notice, ere any ear had taken note of their arrival.

In another part of the Rover's keep, while all
this was in progress, even to the point of time
wherein Teresa fainted, there was a widely different
picture, had any eye been there to look
upon it. It was the very topmost turret of that
tall building—a small octagonal watch tower,
overlooking the whole esplanade below, and having
the breech of the huge gun, which has before
been mentioned, within six feet of its doorway,
which opened on the battlements. Access was only
gained to this high turret by a steep winding stairway
from the large armory below; and on the
platform, at the stair head, so that no living thing
could pass it without awakening them, were
stretched on a soft rug full armed for instant battle,
the two gigantic negroes.

This was the Rover's den, his last stronghold,
his chosen privacy. Lighted by day through eight
tall pointed windows, now muffled all by blinds
of Indian matting; and in the night by a large
brazen lamp, with four bright burners, it was as
light as life, though silent as the grave. It was
the plainest—nay! the only plain chamber of that
superb and gorgeous building; its floor and walls
being covered equally with the soft seats woven
by Indian girls, from the sweet aromatic seeds
and spicy grasses of that region—its furniture, two
or three camp stools of dark English oak, a centre
table of the same fabric, covered with maps and
plans of battles or the like, a silver standish and
a tall golden crucifix—and another large broad
slab of some Indian wood, littered with charts
and papers, instruments of astronomy and navigation,
pistols and dirks, and articles of clothing, (such
as fringed gloves, and feathered hats) and one or two
tall wine flasks, with a Venetian drinking glass of
scarce inferior height. Upon the walls hung many
suits of armor with fire-arms of rare and choice
construction, and swords of exquisite device and
manufacture. The only other article of furniture,
and that perhaps the most important in the chamber,
was a large low bedstead of oak, with a plain
cotton matress, and white draperies of simple
linen—and on that lowly bed reclined in deep,
though troubled slumber, the mighty frame of the
great English buccaneer, with his fair favorite by
his side, sleeping as calmly as a summer's night
upon a breezeless river. Her rich redundant curls
fell off in loose and wavy masses from her fair
brow, floating across the massive chest and muscular
shoulders of the buccaneer, on which that
brow was pillowed; her eyes were closed, but the
long fringe which curtained them was penciled
in distinct relief against her clear complexion—
the whole expression of her face, as she slept, was
exquisitely pure and child-like, and the soft smile
which nestled in the twin dimples of her rosy
mouth, seemed born of innocent and tranquil bliss.
So was it not with her companion. Dark frowns
and gloomy shadows chased one another fast and
thick over his broad expressive features—the sweat
stood in full bubbles on his turbulent brow—a
fierce sarcastic smile now writhed his pallid lips,
and now he laughed almost aloud, but with a scornful
and self-mocking laughter, such as the fiends
might use, jeering at stainless virtue. His great
chest heaved and fell, not with the regular pulsations
of healthful innocent sleep, but with convulsive
pants and throbbings—his arms were dashed
violently to and fro, with the hands clenched like
iron—such were the night dreams of the Rover,

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and fearful as they must needs have been, to
judge by their effect, as fearfully were they dispelled.
A clear sharp ringing sound as of a musket
shot close to the inmost keep, rung through
the night air—one of the Indian allies of Don
Amidis having unconsciously discharged his arquebuse,
and so called down discovery—little, however,
if at all premature—on the attacking party.

Upon the instant, though the fair being by his
side yet slumbered all unconscious of alarm,
Reginald Ringwood sprung to his feet, fully awake,
and in the clearest mastery of his senses—one
bound—he stood upon the platform of the keep,
and in less time than it would have taken any
other man to mark one portion of the perils that
environed him, he had envisaged all; and seen the
only hope that was left to him. The invaders, as yet
knew not, it would seem, whether they were discovered,
and rested yet upon their arms; and Ringwood
seeing clearly that the exterior works were all
untenable already, and knowing that his only hope
of making good the citadel itself, depended on his
getting men to man his guns from the great barracks,
resolved to turn this brief inaction to advantage.
Before the very blacks had roused them
from their slumbers, he had sprung to the breech
of the huge cannon, had wheeled it round upon its
pivot—Herculean task for any single arm, how
puissant it might be soever!—had pointed it upon
the nearest, longest caravel, and, lighting a match
instantly from the lamp in his turret, had discharged
it on the foe. A broad bright glare shot
out into the bosom of the night, a cloud of snowy
volume was driven before it, and a roar, like that
of twenty thunder claps, shook the strong tower
to its base, and deafened for an instant every ear
that heard it. Before its echoes had subsided,
before the Spaniards, in turn, surprised, (for the
huge missile striking the great caravel amid-ships,
had cut her mainmast by the board, carrying with
it all the mizen tops) had poured in their answering
broadside, the Rover's bugle, wound clear and
lustily, the signal of recall, was heard by the
awakened pirates, who rushed half-dressed—their
weapons in their hands—from the rear of the buildings
to obey his signal. The instant he had fired
the cannon, a dozen stalwart blacks, Pluto and
Charon at their head, the garrison of this keep,
stood on the platform at his side, heavily armed
and ready. Dressing himself the while he spake,
he thundered forth his orders with strange rapidity
and wonderful precision—

“Pluto and Charon, away both of ye, down to
the southern sally port, unbar it on the instant,
holding it well in hand the while, to admit our
fellows from the barrack; but see ye let not the
Spaniards enter! You others, quick there, quick!
load the great culverin, and run it out again—see
that you keep the level—so, well done, lads—now
fire!” and with the words again forth burst the
stunning roar—“So, cheerily brave hearts—fight
it thus till the great caravel go down—then wheel
it on the next, and sink her likewise! I go to
man the inner ramparts. Ha! Bella, my sweet
girl,” he cried, as she came forth in disarray—
“down to your bower, my girl, and dight you!
Fore God, but I believe our time is come already!”
And with the word she darted down the stairway,
and reached the sally-port just as the buccaneers,
half-naked, scattered and dismayed, began to pour
in from the esplanade. But few and faint they
came, all breathless, many wounded, and some to
drop down dead the instant they had forced their
entry—for in a moment, after the Rover's unexpected
shot, the Spanish crews had started to their
guns, and five broadsides of very heavy metal
were poured into the clustered buildings of the
pirates, before they were yet well afoot, so that
the carnage was tremendous; then, when they
had rushed out, Don Amadis wheeled his two
hundred musqueteers into a line upon their flank,
poured in a shattering volley upon their scattered
masses, and then charged sword in hand with his
Castilian troopers, and all his Indian volunteers.
Darkness alone saved any from destruction, and
it was out of four hundred soldiers, for so many
alone had remained in the lines, scarcely a hundred
sound men entered, with perhaps fifty more,
wounded and wholly useless—not force, in short,
enough to man the guns, even at the rate of one
man to a cannon.

Still this mere handful was disposed, by the
wondrous genius of the Rover, with such rare
tact and skill, manning such guns alone as were
most useful, that until day-break he was enabled
not merely to repel the attacking parties, but to
beat them quite back from his lines with fearful
slaughter—three times he rallied, and each time
brought back his every man unharmed; leaving
the ground which he had traversed piled high with
carcasses, and reeking with hot gore. Meantime
the black crew on the keep plied the long culverin
with unabated zeal; its every bullet plunging into
the castled sides of the tall Spanish caravellas—
but not for that did they abate their murderous and
well sustained cannonading against the pirate barracks,
until not a stick or stone of them stood upright
to cover any foeman. Then, but not until
then, did they direct their fire on the keep; and
even then so distant was it from their guns, and
at an elevation so considerable, that their fire
did it but small damage, while, all the time, they
suffered heavily. Meantime, the armed boats
of the squadron landed; and their crews formed

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instantly a junction with the land forces led by
Amadis Ferrajo; which, by the dint of energy
and zeal almost unparalleled, had forced their way
through tangled brakes and shaking quagmires,
over broad lakes and navigable rivers, to that impregnable
strong hold, as it was ever deemed by
the too confident and careless Rover.

Tremendous was the fate of every living being
who met the onslaught of the infuriate Spaniards—
no quarter was shown—none! neither to age
nor sex—to innocence, nor beauty! Hundreds of
miserable children were tossed upon the spearheads
of the pitiless avengers—hundreds of women
shot, or cut down, or spared only to glut for
a brief space the fierce lust of their captors.—
When the day dawned, woman nor child survived—
and not a groan was heard from the red slope—
red with their smoking gore!

Day dawned; and, as the light grew clear, the
weakness of the defenders was discovered; and
the assailants, forming in six columns, each column
equal to the whole force under Ringwood, rushed
desperate to win the ramparts. The guns were
necessarily silent after the first discharge, for it
was needful now that each man should fight hand
to hand, or let the lines be carried! And they
were carried in ten minutes! for though the buccaneers
fought like incarnate devils, though Ringwood
bore a charmed life, setting it fifty times
upon a die and still unwounded, man after man
was piked or cut down by his side, until the two
blacks alone, with four or five English pirates,
were left alive, and able to wield weapons.

“In with you, Pluto and Charon—into the keep
and hold the gate in hand—now! Anson, Falconer,
ha! Gambier, too, and Drake, one charge
more on these dogs of Spain,—one for St. George
and England!” And with the words, the five
men dashed upon a column, headed by Amadis
Ferrajo, of full two hundred veterans rushing in,
with their leveled pikes, by the great gate which
they had stormed—three men went down at
three strokes of the Rover; and his last troopers
seconded him like men, and gallant ones, if guilty!—
the column wavered; but Amadis rallied it instantly
with words of fire, and charged resistless!
one by one down went Ringwood's men pierced
each with fifty wounds, each fighting till he fell
“for England! merry England!”

The Rover stood alone—but what recked he of
that? he crossed swords with Don Amadis, beat
down his guard, dealt him a blow that would have
stretched him lifeless on the plain, but that his rapier
shivered to the grasp—shot two men with
his pistols—seized a third round the waist, who
would have stopped him; and hurled him to the
earth, so that the blood gushed from ears, eyes,
and mouth, and he stirred hand no more—rushed
through the castle gate, and ere its bars were fast
behind him, stood in the presence of Teresa, all
grim and gory, but unwounded.

CHAPTER XII.

For a moment or two the wretched girl gazed
in pale terror on the dread apparition which stood
before her; nor would it indeed have been easy to
imagine one more terrible. His gorgeous dress
was all begrimed with the black smoke of gunpowder,
and dashed with frequent flakes of human
gore; his face and hands were crimson; and,
more than all, in his wild eye there was a gleam
of terrible fire that could be compared to nothing
but the glare of some dread fiend caught from the
penal flames of his eternal prison house.

She had risen from her knees on his entrance,
for during the whole din and clamor of the desperate
assault, her silvery tones had mounted to
the throne of grace in pure and constant supplication—
she stood staring at his distorted furious
features, speechless with terror and despair; but
when he rushed toward her, and seized her delicate
arm in his strong grasp, she sent forth a long
fluttering thrilling shriek, so awfully acute and
shrill, that pealing far above the blended roar of
musquetry and cannon, above the shouts and yells
of the assailants, above the clang of axes plied
fast and furiously against the portal of the keep,
it reached the ears of the besiegers, and lent new
vigor to their arms, new fire to their hearts. Yet
though the gate was crashing even now, and wavering
beneath their blows—yet had their aid
come all too late—for he had seized her round the
waist, despite her feeble struggles, despite her
pitiful supplications, lifted her from the ground,
and flung her by main force upon a velvet ottoman,
with all her raven hair disheveled, the
braids which bound it having burst, and all her
garments ruffled and in the last disorder from the
hot struggle—he paused one second in his barbarous
pastime, and profiting by that brief interval
all out of breath and panting as she was,

“Your word!” she cried, “your word—your
plighted oath of honor!—never to do me wrong!”

A bitter sneering laugh burst from his lips.

“My word!” he said, “my word—a pirate's
plighted word!—a robber's oath of honor!—ha!
ha! you jest, Teresa—ha! ha! you would be
merry—hark,” he continued, as the dread sounds
of the assault rung nearer and more near. “Hark!
to the blows!—the steps—the voices of your
friends! There rings the full shout of your cursed
sire—the war cry of the Des Aviles—there

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the fierce battle note of Amadis Ferrajo! Close!
close at hand, fair lady!—close enough—almost!
to preserve you. Ten minutes more, and they
shall find you here, but their arms shall not clasp
you to their hearts—father's nor lover's! No!
no! I tell you no! Nor their lips press your
brow, for you shall be a thing blighted, dishonored,
foul! Vengeance! ho! vengeance! vengeance
on Melendez,” and with the words he again
caught her in his arms; and in a moment more
his horrid purpose had been too well accomplished;
but while she shrieked and struggled, as impotently,
it is true, as the small bird in the talons
of the merciless falcon, but still with all her
power, the fair haired English beauty rushed,
hardly less disarrayed than the Spanish maiden,
into the room; and close behind, both her comrades,
screaming for present aid to Ringwood,
and fearful was their need! For, seeing now that
every hope of protracting the defence was over,
and that the enraged Spaniards were forcing their
passage foot by foot, the brutal negroes, who had
manned the great gun on the platform of the keep,
and fought it until now, right dauntlessly, had left
their post as desperate; and drunk with bloodshed
and despair, maddened with liquor and with lust,
had turned their fierce and brutal passions from
their natural enemies, against the favorite beauties
of their leader. But better had it been for
them, had they awaited the avenging Spaniard;
better had they rushed into the den of the cubdrawn
tigress, than thus have roused the fury of
their chief.

Leaving Teresa, pale and breathless, and too
terrified to thank God for her near escape, he
rushed upon the mutineers—the first he caught
about the middle, for he had no offensive arms—
his sword having been broken in the conflict, and
all his pistols emptied!—and hurled him headlong
through the window, like an enormous missile
shot from some giant catapult. The strong brocaded
awnings opposed his passage; but with such
mighty impulse was he sent, that the tough velvet
was rent through and through, as though it had
been gossamer—and the huge buccaneer was seen
one instant sprawling and writhing in mid air
with a terrific sound of blended screams and
curses on his tongue, before he fell upon the lifted
pikes of the besiegers. Quelled for a moment by
this awful spectacle, the other negroes stood
aghast, and Ringwood leaping upon them with
the bound of an angry tiger, snatched his own
weapon from the first, and whirling it about his
head, clove him with one blow to the jaws.

“Ha! dogs!” he shouted, in tones trumpet-like
and clear, “ha! villains! dare ye dispute my
will—or look too boldly on my prizes?—down to
your kennels, dogs! down to the dungeon gate,
and fight it to the last, with these accursed Spaniards!
Down to the gate, I say, and if ye must,
of your low nature, perish brutes, see that, at
least, ye perish brave ones!”

Not a word more was spoken, nor a blow
stricken, but all cowed and abashed, the mutineers
rushed down the sounding stairway, and,
ere a moment passed, might be heard battling
hand to hand with the fierce veterans of Melendez,
who had already forced the gates, and were now
rushing in, like a flood tide, resistless. Just at
this juncture, by the other door, Pluto and Charon,
the trusty guardsmen of the Rover, entered
the harem, bleeding both from several recent
wounds, but still bold and undaunted.

“Ha! all is lost, then,” exclaimed the Rover,
as they entered. “Is all lost, Charon?”

“All is lost,” answered the faithful black,”
“all is lost! carried! postern gate carried too!
enemy in the hall, will be here presently!”

“And ye—what would ye?” cried the great
English pirate, still calm in his extremity and
fearless—“what would ye—fly?”

“Will massa,” answered the negroes in one
breath, “fly with massa Ringwood by covered
way into the forest—or if he will, die here, with
him.”

“Ha! by the covered way—fine boys—I had
forgotten! so may I live, if not for victory, still
at the least for vengeance—reach down three carbines
from the wall, there—they are all loaded—
now light the matches—so give me that long Toledo—
ha! here they come—they come! but by
the fiends, too late! Charon, take thou Toraida—
set her in safety in the forest, and thou hast
won thy freedom. Pluto, bear thou Italian Beatrice!
Thou art for me, Teresa—my girl, no
dallying!” and he shook her fiercely by the arm,
as she would have struggled to escape; for now
the voices of her father—of her dear Amadis,
came close upon her ear, above the clash and clatter
of the contest, as they bore their last foes
bleeding and breathless at the sword's point before
them, and now they had won the staircase, and
now were on the very threshold of the gay armory—
too late! He had swung her up in his
stalwart arms, threw her across one shoulder as
though she had been an infant. “Follow me,
Bella,” he cried, “follow close, thine English
blood is brave, thou needst no supporter! follow
me close, and bar the door behind!” and with the
words he sprung across the vestibule, entered the
secret stairway in the wall, and was just out of
sight, when beating down the last of the defenders,
Don Amadis darted through the opposite
doorway with twenty veterans at his back. Well

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did the Rover say that fair girl's blood was brave;
for us he left the armory, she snatched down from
the wall a studded buckler of the tough hide of
the rhinoceros, a light Damascus cimiter, and
with her beautiful blue eyes beaming with fiery
valor, made good the door in a moment, and barred
and chained it fast in the very teeth of the foe!

With speedy steps they trod the damp floors of
the vaulted passage—they barred three massive
doors behind them, yet with so desperate speed
did Amadis pursue, plying his ponderous battle
axe, that as they reached the sally-port, they
heard him thundering already at the last portal
they had passed—they hurried through the sallyport,
a plank was thrust across the fosse, they
darted over it in safety!—they stood in the wild
forest!—another minute and they had been concealed
in the dark hazes of a labyrinth so tortuous
and dense, that scarcely could the keen instinct of
an Indian have traced their flying footsteps! But
at the very moment when they crossed the fosse,
and climbed its landward face, five or six Spanish
musqueteers, who stood on guard in the stone bastion,
discovered them! blew their slow matches,
leveled their long bright barreled harquebuses,
and a sharp volley followed! Three balls struck
Ringwood; his left arm fell to his side shattered
by one bullet—well was it for Teresa, that he had
just released her, or that same ball had borne her
fate upon its wings!—a second pierced his broad
chest; a third just grazed his muscular thigh—yet
he flinched not, nor uttered any sign of pain nor
wavered in the least. By the same volley the
negro Charon fell, shot dead where he stood, by
one ball; while another, so closely was that terrible
discharge poured in, killed the poor Persian
in his arms—happier so to fall, than to survive
awhile and glut the furious vengeance of the enraged
Castilians.

“Ha, dogs!”—shouted the Rover—shaking his
long bright rapier at them, in defiance—“Ha!
dogs—would ye were at arm's length! Now,
Pluto, quick! quick! while their muskets are
discharged, pull the plank over to this side, and
all will yet be well—quick!—quick, I say!—
they come!”

And they did come—swinging his rapier high
in air, and leaping like a freed panther from the
dark sally-port, all youthful energy, all high enthusiastic
valor—young Amadis Ferrajo—and
close to his heels, with his long gray locks all
unhelmeted and floating on the breeze, and his
antique steel panoply all blood from greaves to
gorget, Juan Melendez de Aviles; and after these,
Pedro, Gutierrez, Sanchez, and Diego, and fifty
more hidalgos of Castile, with their high hearts
aflame for deadly vengeance.

Forth leaped young Amadis, the foremost—his
foot was on the plank already—the cry of triumph
ringing already from his lips—when almost simultaneously,
the negro, who when he stooped down to
remove the plank had not laid by his carbine, and
the great Rover fired. Well was it for Don Amadis—
his armor was Spain's choicest fabric—had
it been steel of any foreign city, he had been sped
that moment; for both balls took effect at scarce
ten paces distance—one striking full upon the
frontlet of his helmet, and leaving a deep dent in
the trusty steel; the other actually penetrating
the strong corslet, so fairly was it aimed, and
even inflicting a slight wound; as it was, stunned
and bewildered for the moment, he went down—
and all around surely believed him dead—though
in a little while he recovered himself and regained
his feet.

Teresa, who had been gazing on the little group,
with hope fresh kindling in her heart, beheld him
fall, and the light left her eyes, and she sunk
faint and senseless on the dark dewy earth. All
this had passed, in less time than is needed to describe
it. As Amadis went down, Melendez
took his place, and rushed across the narrow
bridge, striking down Pluto, with a single sweep
of his two-handed broadsword, a breathless corpse
into the stagnant moat—but while one foot was yet
upon the quivering plank, the Rover leaped upon
his foe. It was a desperate and a dreadful conflict—
for the wounds—one of which was in truth
slowly mortal—counterbalanced the advantage
which Ringwood's youth would have otherwise
given him over his aged yet still firm antagonist.
Melendez was armed cap-a-pie all to his
helmet; the Englishman was quite unarmed, with
the exception of his long two-edged broadsword—
so that the one had all his body to defend—the
other his head only. Yet was this point of vantage
neutralized by the extraordinary skill of
fence, the blithe agility, the mighty strength
of Ringwood, who like a wounded boar was but
the fiercer and more furious for his hurts.
Dreadful and desperate was that contest, yet it
was over almost in a minute—their swords
flashed like the beams of the noon-day sun, too
dazzling and too fleet for any eye to trace them
yet ere six blows and parries were exchanged,
the Rover's blade descended with such violence
upon the weapon of Melendez, that it beat down
his guard, and afterward inflicted a deep wound
on his brow—the old man staggered back, the
Rover pressing on with a fierce lunge, and
sheathing his rapier in the Spaniard's throat
above the gorget vein.

“Ha! ha!” he laughed aloud with a fiendish
tone, as he shook off his dying foeman from the

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point of his ensanguined weapon into the stagnant
water of the ditch—“Ha! ha! ha! sister—sweet
angel sister--thou art avenged! avenged! avenged!
and I die happy!” and with the words, unhurt by
any blow, unsmitten by any mortal hand in equal
combat, he staggered up the slope, fell by Teresa's
side, and was dead in a moment. Whether or no
it was the sound of Ringwood's heavy fall beside
her, cannot be told, but it is certain that as he
dropped, she started to her feet, and, with recovered
senses, gazed wildly about her.

Her father's corpse she saw not, for falling into
the deep wet fosse it had sunk instantly to the
bottom, and was kept there by the weight of armor
which it bore!—but she did see her lover,
whom she had fancied dead, alive and on his feet,
and rushing to her rescue!—she did see her deadly
enemy prostrate and lifeless at her side!—and
over him with her broad blue eyes flashing fire,
with lifted buckler, brandished blade, his the
beautiful Bella, standing erect and fearless—so to
defend from shame all that was left of her undaunted
lover.

Teresa screamed, she sprung to save her, but
she was all too late, for flushed with victory, and
mad with vengeful fury, the Spaniards were upon
her. One good blow did the English girl strike
at the nearest enemy—one good home blow, and
the strongest man who met it staggered, and fell
headlong! but ere he struck the earth, ten pike
heads tore the lovely bosom of that frail faithful
girl.

As she had spoken, so she died! She died
with him whom she would not survive! their
life-blood mingled, as she breathed out her last
sigh on his mangled breast—and one tomb held
their bodies—for at Teresa's bidding, when the
fierce rage of war was over, a tomb was reared
by that calm basin, over the lovely Bella, and the
great English Buccaneer.

Long did Teresa mourn—long did she weep her
brother and her father; yet her tears ceased at
length to flow, as she blushed her consent to her
young rescuer's ardent wooing; and, when they
sailed together from the wild shores of Florida,
for their dear Spanish home, the faithful slave
Cassandra followed her mistress' footsteps; and
many a time and often in after days and a far
land, they shed a pitying tear for the kind-hearted
English girl, and half admired the daring, even
while they blamed the sins of Ringwood the great
Rover!

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Herbert, Henry William, 1807-1858 [1843], Ringwood the rover: a tale of Florida (William H. Graham, Philadelphia) [word count] [eaf140].
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