Stories of American Life and Adventure eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 163 pages of information about Stories of American Life and Adventure.

Stories of American Life and Adventure eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 163 pages of information about Stories of American Life and Adventure.

When he was fighting against another ship, he wore a strap over his shoulders to which were fastened large pistols.  In those days, cannon were touched off by means of a slow match, a kind of cord that burns slowly like punk.  When Blackbeard went into battle, he twisted some of these slow matches or cords round his head, and stuck some of them under his hat.  The ends of these matches were burning, and they looked like fiery, hissing snakes.  With his beard turned back over his ears, and fire all about his head, he seemed to be a tall fiend.

Blackbeard was more like a fiend than a man.  He was cruel and wicked in every way.  Some bad men are sometimes kind-hearted, but Blackbeard was always cruel.  He would shoot even his own men in order to make his crew afraid of him.

He did much of his bad work on the coast of North Carolina.  Here he found bays and sounds where the water was shallow.  Large ships could not easily follow him into these places.  The Governor of North Carolina was a bad man.  He took part of Blackbeard’s plunder, and let Blackbeard go safely about the country.  The people were afraid of the pirate.  They sent to the Governor of Virginia, and asked him to fit out a ship to capture Blackbeard.

Two sloops that could sail in shallow water were sent.  Lieutenant Maynard was the commander.  The ships left Virginia secretly.  No one knew where they were going.

When Maynard came in sight of Blackbeard’s sloop, he hung out his flag.  Blackbeard took a glass of rum and drank it, calling to Maynard, “I’ll give you no quarter, nor take any.”

Maynard replied, “I do not expect any quarter from you, nor will I give any.”

This meant that neither of them would take any prisoners, but that every man must fight for his life.

Maynard tried to run alongside Blackbeard’s ship.  He wanted to take his men on board the pirate ship, and fight it out on her deck.  But Blackbeard had put a large negro near to the gunpowder on his ship.  He said to the negro, “If the men from the other ship get on board of ours, you must set fire to the gunpowder, and blow us all up.”

Maynard was running toward the pirate ship to get on board; but Blackbeard fired all the cannon on that side of his ship, and killed some of Maynard’s men.  This was really lucky for Maynard; for, if he had got on board, the negro would have set fire to the gunpowder, and the pirates and Maynard’s men would all have been blown to pieces at once.

Maynard now sent his men down into the hold of the ship.  They were out of sight of the pirates, but they had their pistols and swords ready.  The sloops were soon close together, and Blackbeard’s men threw boxes full of powder and shot, and pieces of lead and iron, on the deck of Maynard’s sloop.  These were so fixed as to go off like bombshells.  But, as nearly all of Maynard’s men were down below the deck, these boxes did little harm.

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Stories of American Life and Adventure from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.