The Pirate Part 57
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"Yes, my son!" answered Norna, with a stern composure, even more frightful than her former impetuosity, "within these fatal walls my father met his death by my means. In yonder chamber was he found a livid and lifeless corpse. Beware of filial disobedience, for such are its fruits!"
So saying, she arose and left the apartment, where Mordaunt remained alone to meditate at leisure upon the extraordinary communication which he had received. He himself had been taught by his father a disbelief in the ordinary superst.i.tions of Zetland; and he now saw that Norna, however ingenious in duping others, could not altogether impose on herself. This was a strong circ.u.mstance in favour of her sanity of intellect; but, on the other hand, her imputing to herself the guilt of parricide seemed so wild and improbable, as, in Mordaunt's opinion, to throw much doubt upon her other a.s.sertions.
He had leisure enough to make up his mind on these particulars, for no one approached the solitary dwelling, of which Norna, her dwarf, and he himself, were the sole inhabitants. The Hoy island in which it stood is rude, bold, and lofty, consisting entirely of three hills--or rather one huge mountain divided into three summits, with the chasms, rents, and valleys, which descend from its summit to the sea, while its crest, rising to great height, and s.h.i.+vered into rocks which seem almost inaccessible, intercepts the mists as they drive from the Atlantic, and, often obscured from the human eye, forms the dark and unmolested retreat of hawks, eagles, and other birds of prey.[34]
The soil of the island is wet, mossy, cold, and unproductive, presenting a sterile and desolate appearance, excepting where the sides of small rivulets, or mountain ravines, are fringed with dwarf bushes of birch, hazel, and wild currant, some of them so tall as to be denominated trees, in that bleak and bare country.
But the view of the sea-beach, which was Mordaunt's favourite walk, when his convalescent state began to permit him to take exercise, had charms which compensated the wild appearance of the interior. A broad and beautiful sound, or strait, divides this lonely and mountainous island from Pomona, and in the centre of that sound lies, like a tablet composed of emerald, the beautiful and verdant little island of Graemsay.
On the distant Mainland is seen the town or village of Stromness, the excellence of whose haven is generally evinced by a considerable number of s.h.i.+pping in the roadstead, and, from the bay growing narrower, and lessening as it recedes, runs inland into Pomona, where its tide fills the fine sheet of water called the Loch of Stennis.
On this beach Mordaunt was wont to wander for hours, with an eye not insensible to the beauties of the view, though his thoughts were agitated with the most embarra.s.sing meditations on his own situation. He was resolved to leave the island as soon as the establishment of his health should permit him to travel; yet grat.i.tude to Norna, of whom he was at least the adopted, if not the real son, would not allow him to depart without her permission, even if he could obtain means of conveyance, of which he saw little possibility. It was only by importunity that he extorted from his hostess a promise, that, if he would consent to regulate his motions according to her directions, she would herself convey him to the capital of the Orkney Islands, when the approaching Fair of Saint Olla should take place there.
FOOTNOTES:
[32] See an explanation of this promise, Note II. of this volume.
[33] Note V.--Character of Norna.
[34] Note VI.--Birds of Prey.
CHAPTER XIV.
Hark to the insult loud, the bitter sneer, The fierce threat answering to the brutal jeer; Oaths fly like pistol-shots, and vengeful words Clash with each other like conflicting swords-- The robber's quarrel by such sounds is shown, And true men have some chance to gain their own.
_Captivity, a Poem._
When Cleveland, borne off in triumph from his a.s.sailants in Kirkwall, found himself once more on board the pirate-vessel, his arrival was hailed with hearty cheers by a considerable part of the crew, who rushed to shake hands with him, and offer their congratulations on his return; for the situation of a Buccanier Captain raised him very little above the level of the lowest of his crew, who, in all social intercourse, claimed the privilege of being his equal.
When his faction, for so these clamorous friends might be termed, had expressed their own greetings, they hurried Cleveland forward to the stern, where Goffe, their present commander, was seated on a gun, listening in a sullen and discontented mood to the shout which announced Cleveland's welcome. He was a man betwixt forty and fifty, rather under the middle size, but so very strongly made, that his crew used to compare him to a sixty-four cut down. Black-haired, bull-necked, and beetle-browed, his clumsy strength and ferocious countenance contrasted strongly with the manly figure and open countenance of Cleveland, in which even the practice of his atrocious profession had not been able to eradicate a natural grace of motion and generosity of expression. The two piratical Captains looked upon each other for some time in silence, while the partisans of each gathered around him. The elder part of the crew were the princ.i.p.al adherents of Goffe, while the young fellows, among whom Jack Bunce was a princ.i.p.al leader and agitator, were in general attached to Cleveland.
At length Goffe broke silence.--"You are welcome aboard, Captain Cleveland.--Smash my taffrail! I suppose you think yourself commodore yet! but that was over, by G--, when you lost your s.h.i.+p, and be d----d!"
And here, once for all, we may take notice, that it was the gracious custom of this commander to mix his words and oaths in nearly equal proportions, which he was wont to call _shotting_ his discourse. As we delight not, however, in the discharge of such artillery, we shall only indicate by a s.p.a.ce like this ---- the places in which these expletives occurred; and thus, if the reader will pardon a very poor pun, we will reduce Captain Goffe's volley of sharp-shot into an explosion of blank cartridges. To his insinuations that he was come on board to a.s.sume the chief command, Cleveland replied, that he neither desired, nor would accept, any such promotion, but would only ask Captain Goffe for a cast of the boat, to put him ash.o.r.e in one of the other islands, as he had no wish either to command Goffe, or to remain in a vessel under his orders.
"And why not under my orders, brother?" demanded Goffe, very austerely; "-- -- -- are you too good a man, -- -- -- with your cheese-toaster and your jib there, -- -- to serve under my orders, and be d----d to you, where there are so many gentlemen that are elder and better seamen than yourself?"
"I wonder which of these capital seamen it was," said Cleveland, coolly, "that laid the s.h.i.+p under the fire of yon six-gun battery, that could blow her out of the water, if they had a mind, before you could either cut or slip? Elder and better sailors than I may like to serve under such a lubber, but I beg to be excused for my own share, Captain--that's all I have got to tell you."
"By G--, I think you are both mad!" said Hawkins the boatswain--"a meeting with sword and pistol may be devilish good fun in its way, when no better is to be had; but who the devil that had common sense, amongst a set of gentlemen in our condition, would fall a quarrelling with each other, to let these duck-winged, web-footed islanders have a chance of knocking us all upon the head?"
"Well said, old Hawkins!" observed Derrick the quarter-master, who was an officer of very considerable importance among these rovers; "I say, if the two captains won't agree to live together quietly, and club both heart and head to defend the vessel, why, d----n me, depose them both, say I, and choose another in their stead!"
"Meaning yourself, I suppose, Master Quarter-Master!" said Jack Bunce; "but that c.o.c.k won't fight. He that is to command gentlemen, should be a gentleman himself, I think; and I give my vote for Captain Cleveland, as spirited and as gentleman-like a man as ever daffed the world aside, and bid it pa.s.s!"
"What! _you_ call yourself a gentleman, I warrant!" retorted Derrick; "why, ---- your eyes! a tailor would make a better out of the worst suit of rags in your strolling wardrobe!--It is a shame for men of spirit to have such a Jack-a-dandy scarecrow on board!"
Jack Bunce was so incensed at these base comparisons, that without more ado, he laid his hand on his sword. The carpenter, however, and boatswain, interfered, the former brandis.h.i.+ng his broad axe, and swearing he would put the skull of the first who should strike a blow past clouting, and the latter reminding them, that, by their articles, all quarrelling, striking, or more especially fighting, on board, was strictly prohibited; and that, if any gentleman had a quarrel to settle, they were to go ash.o.r.e, and decide it with cutla.s.s and pistol in presence of two of their messmates.
"I have no quarrel with any one, -- -- --!" said Goffe, sullenly; "Captain Cleveland has wandered about among the islands here, amusing himself, -- -- --! and we have wasted our time and property in waiting for him, when we might have been adding twenty or thirty thousand dollars to the stock-purse. However, if it pleases the rest of the gentlemen-adventurers, -- -- --! why, I shall not grumble about it."
"I propose," said the boatswain, "that there should be a general council called in the great cabin, according to our articles, that we may consider what course we are to hold in this matter."
A general a.s.sent followed the boatswain's proposal; for every one found his own account in these general councils, in which each of the rovers had a free vote. By far the greater part of the crew only valued this franchise, as it allowed them, upon such solemn occasions, an unlimited quant.i.ty of liquor--a right which they failed not to exercise to the uttermost, by way of aiding their deliberations. But a few amongst the adventurers, who united some degree of judgment with the daring and profligate character of their profession, were wont, at such periods, to limit themselves within the bounds of comparative sobriety, and by these, under the apparent form of a vote of the general council, all things of moment relating to the voyage and undertakings of the pirates were in fact determined. The rest of the crew, when they recovered from their intoxication, were easily persuaded that the resolution adopted had been the legitimate effort of the combined wisdom of the whole senate.
Upon the present occasion the debauch had proceeded until the greater part of the crew were, as usual, displaying inebriation in all its most brutal and disgraceful shapes--swearing empty and unmeaning oaths--venting the most horrid imprecations in the mere gaiety of their heart--singing songs, the ribaldry of which was only equalled by their profaneness; and, from the middle of this earthly h.e.l.l, the two captains, together with one or two of their princ.i.p.al adherents, as also the carpenter and boatswain, who always took a lead on such occasions, had drawn together into a pandemonium, or privy council of their own, to consider what was to be done; for, as the boatswain metaphorically observed, they were in a narrow channel, and behoved to keep sounding the tide-way.
When they began their consultations, the friends of Goffe remarked, to their great displeasure, that he had not observed the wholesome rule to which we have just alluded; but that, in endeavouring to drown his mortification at the sudden appearance of Cleveland, and the reception he met with from the crew, the elder Captain had not been able to do so without overflowing his reason at the same time. His natural sullen taciturnity had prevented this from being observed until the council began its deliberations, when it proved impossible to hide it.
The first person who spoke was Cleveland, who said, that, so far from wis.h.i.+ng the command of the vessel, he desired no favour at any one's hand, except to land him upon some island or holm at a distance from Kirkwall, and leave him to s.h.i.+ft for himself.
The boatswain remonstrated strongly against this resolution. "The lads,"
he said, "all knew Cleveland, and could trust his seamans.h.i.+p, as well as his courage; besides, he never let the grog get quite uppermost, and was always in proper trim, either to sail the s.h.i.+p, or to fight the s.h.i.+p, whereby she was never without some one to keep her course when he was on board.--And as for the n.o.ble Captain Goffe," continued the mediator, "he is as stout a heart as ever broke biscuit, and that I will uphold him; but then, when he has his grog aboard--I speak to his face--he is so d----d funny with his cranks and his jests, that there is no living with him. You all remember how nigh he had run the s.h.i.+p on that cursed Horse of Copinsha, as they call it, just by way of frolic; and then you know how he fired off his pistol under the table, when we were at the great council, and shot Jack Jenkins in the knee, and cost the poor devil his leg, with his pleasantry."[35]
"Jack Jenkins was not a chip the worse," said the carpenter; "I took the leg off with my saw as well as any loblolly-boy in the land could have done--heated my broad axe, and seared the stump--ay, by ----! and made a jury-leg that he shambles about with as well as ever he did--for Jack could never cut a feather."[36]
"You are a clever fellow, carpenter," replied the boatswain, "a d----d clever fellow! but I had rather you tried your saw and red-hot axe upon the s.h.i.+p's knee-timbers than on mine, sink me!--But that here is not the case--The question is, if we shall part with Captain Cleveland here, who is a man of thought and action, whereby it is my belief it would be heaving the pilot overboard when the gale is blowing on a lee-sh.o.r.e.
And, I must say, it is not the part of a true heart to leave his mates, who have been here waiting for him till they have missed stays. Our water is wellnigh out, and we have junketed till provisions are low with us. We cannot sail without provisions--we cannot get provisions without the good-will of the Kirkwall folks. If we remain here longer, the Halcyon frigate will be down upon us--she was seen off Peterhead two days since,--and we shall hang up at the yard-arm to be sun-dried. Now, Captain Cleveland will get us out of the hobble, if any can. He can play the gentleman with these Kirkwall folks, and knows how to deal with them on fair terms, and foul, too, if there be occasion for it."
"And so you would turn honest Captain Goffe a-grazing, would ye?" said an old weatherbeaten pirate, who had but one eye; "what though he has his humours, and made my eye dowse the glim in his fancies and frolics, he is as honest a man as ever walked a quarter-deck, for all that; and d----n me but I stand by him so long as t'other lantern is lit!"
"Why, you would not hear me out," said Hawkins; "a man might as well talk to so many negers!--I tell you, I propose that Cleveland shall only be Captain from one, _post meridiem_, to five _a. m._, during which time Goffe is always drunk."
The Captain of whom he last spoke gave sufficient proof of the truth of his words, by uttering an inarticulate growl, and attempting to present a pistol at the mediator Hawkins.
"Why, look ye now!" said Derrick, "there is all the sense he has, to get drunk on council-day, like one of these poor silly fellows!"
"Ay," said Bunce, "drunk as Davy's sow, in the face of the field, the fray, and the senate!"
"But, nevertheless," continued Derrick, "it will never do to have two captains in the same day. I think week about might suit better--and let Cleveland take the first turn."
"There are as good here as any of them," said Hawkins; "howsomdever, I object nothing to Captain Cleveland, and I think he may help us into deep water as well as another."
"Ay," exclaimed Bunce, "and a better figure he will make at bringing these Kirkwallers to order than his sober predecessor!--So Captain Cleveland for ever!"
[Ill.u.s.tration]
"Stop, gentlemen," said Cleveland, who had hitherto been silent; "I hope you will not choose me Captain without my own consent?"
"Ay, by the blue vault of heaven will we," said Bunce, "if it be _pro bono publico_!"
"But hear me, at least," said Cleveland--"I do consent to take command of the vessel, since you wish it, and because I see you will ill get out of the sc.r.a.pe without me."
"Why, then, I say, Cleveland for ever, again!" shouted Bunce.
The Pirate Part 57
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