The Mirror of Literature, Amusement, and Instruction eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 50 pages of information about The Mirror of Literature, Amusement, and Instruction.

The Mirror of Literature, Amusement, and Instruction eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 50 pages of information about The Mirror of Literature, Amusement, and Instruction.

“A-hoy! a-hoy!” cried he, at the door, striking the ground with the butt end of his carbine! “down with the hammocks, down with the hammocks!  We will sleep some other day.  The Squirrel has made signals for a landing this evening, and we must see what she has in her, muslin or tobacco.  Come, come, turn out, my sea-boys.”

In a twinkling every body was ready.  They opened an arm-chest, and every man took out a carbine or blunderbuss, a brace of pistols, and a cutlass or boarding pike, and we set out, after having drunk so many glasses of brandy and arrack that the bottles were empty.  At this time there were not more than twenty of us, but we were joined or met, at one place or another, by so many individuals, that on reaching the sea side we were forty-seven in number, exclusive of two females and some countrymen from the adjacent villages, who brought hired horses, which they concealed in a hollow behind some rocks.

It was night, and the wind was shifting, whilst the sea dashed with so much force, that I did not understand how any vessels could approach without being cast on shore.  What confirmed this idea was, that by the starlight I saw a small boat rowing backwards and forwards, as if it feared to land.  They told me afterwards that this was only a manoeuvre to ascertain if all was ready for the unloading, and no danger to be apprehended.  Peters now lighted a reflecting lantern, which one of the men had brought, and immediately extinguished it; the Squirrel raised a lantern at her mizen, which only shone for a moment, and then disappeared like a glow-worm on a summer’s night.  We then saw it approach, and anchor about a gun-shot off from the spot where we were.  Our troop then divided into three companies, two of which were placed five hundred paces in front, to resist the revenue officers if they should present themselves.  The men of these companies were then placed at intervals along the ground, having at the left arm a packthread which ran from one to the other:  in case of alarm, it was announced by a slight pull, and each being ordered to answer this signal by firing his gun, a line of firing was thus kept up, which perplexed the revenue officers.  The third company, of which I was one, remained by the sea-side, to cover the landing and the transport of the cargo.

All being thus arranged, the Newfoundland dog already mentioned, and who was with us, dashed at a word into the midst of the waves, and swam powerfully in the direction of the Squirrel, and in an instant afterwards returned with the end of a rope in his mouth.  Peters instantly seized it, and began to draw it towards him, making us signs to assist him, which I obeyed mechanically.  After a few tugs, I saw that at the end of the cable were a dozen small casks, which floated towards us.  I then perceived that the vessel thus contrived to keep sufficiently far from the shore, not to run a risk of being stranded.  In an instant the casks, smeared over with something

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The Mirror of Literature, Amusement, and Instruction from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.