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The Jolly Roger Tales: 60+ Pirate Novels, Treasure-Hunt Tales & Sea Adventures. Лаймен Фрэнк БаумЧитать онлайн книгу.

The Jolly Roger Tales: 60+ Pirate Novels, Treasure-Hunt Tales & Sea Adventures - Лаймен Фрэнк Баум


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      1 The contest about the whale will remind the poetical reader of Waller’s “ Battle of the Summer Islands.”

      Chapter XVIII

       Table of Contents

      And helter-skelter have I rode to thee,

       And tidings do I bring, and lucky joys,

       And golden times, and happy news of price.

       Ancient Pistol.

      Fortune, who seems at times to bear a conscience, owed the hospitable Udaller some amends, and accordingly repaid to Burgh-Westra the disappointment occasioned by the unsuccessful whale-fishing, by sending thither, on the evening of the day in which that incident happened, no less a person than the jagger, or travelling merchant, as he styled himself, Bryce Snailsfoot, who arrived in great pomp, himself on one pony, and his pack of goods, swelled to nearly double its usual size, forming the burden of another, which was led by a bareheaded barelegged boy.

      As Bryce announced himself the bearer of important news, he was introduced to the dining apartment, where (for that primitive age was no respecter of persons) he was permitted to sit down at a sidetable, and amply supplied with provisions and good liquor; while the attentive hospitality of Magnus permitted no questions to be put to him, until, his hunger and thirst appeased, he announced, with the sense of importance attached to distant travels, that he had just yesterday arrived at Lerwick from Kirkwall, the capital of Orkney, and would have been here yesterday, but it blew hard off the Fitful Head.”

      “We had no wind here,” said Magnus.

      “There is somebody has not been sleeping, then,” said the pedlar, “and her name begins with N; but Heaven is above all.”

      “But the news from Orkney, Bryce, instead of croaking about a capful of wind?”

      “Such news,” replied Bryce, “as has not been heard this thirty years — not since Cromwell’s time.”

      “There is not another Revolution, is there?” said Halcro; “ King James has not come back, as blithe as King Charlie did, has he?”

      “It’s news,” replied the pedlar, “ that are worth twenty kings, and kingdoms to boot of them; for what good did the evolutions ever do us? and I dare say we have seen a dozen, great and sma’.”

      “Are any Indiamen come north about?” said Magnus Troil.

      “Ye are nearer the mark, Fowd,” said the jagger; “but it-is nae Indiaman, but a gallant armed vessel, chokeful of merchandise, that they part with so easy that a decent man like myself can afford to give the country the best pennyworths you ever saw; and that you will say, when I open that pack, for I count to carry it back another sort lighter than when I brought it here.”

      “Ay, ay, Bryce,” said the Udaller, “you must have had good bargains if you sell cheap; but what ship was it?”

      “Cannot justly say — I spoke to nobody but the captain, who was a discreet man; but she had been down on the Spanish Main, for she has silks and satins, and tobacco, I warrant you, and wine, and no lack of sugar, and bonny-wallies, baith of silver and gowd, and a bonnie dredging of gold-dust into the bargain.”

      “What like was she?” said Cleveland, who seemed to give much attention.

      “A stout ship,” said the itinerant merchant, “schooner-rigged, sails like a dolphin, they say, carries twelve guns, and is pierced for twenty.”

      “Did you hear the captain’s name? “ said Cleveland, speaking rather lower than his usual tone.

      just ca’d him the Captain,” said Bryce Snailsfoot; “for I make it a rule never to ask questions of them I deal with in the way of trade; for there is many an honest captain, begging your pardon, Captain Cleveland, that does not care to have his name tacked to his title; and as lang as we ken what bargains we are making, what signifies it wha we are making them wi’, ye ken?”

      “Bryce Snailsfoot is a’cautious man,” said the Udaller, laughing; “he knows a fool may ask more questions than a wise man cares to answer.”

      “I have dealt with the fair traders in my day,” replied Snailsfoot, “ and I ken nae use in blurting braid out with a man’s name at every moment; but I will uphold this gentleman to be a gallant commander — ay, and a kind one too; for every one of his crew is as brave in apparel as himself nearly — the very foremast-men have their silken scarfs; I have seen many a lady wear a warse, and think hersell nae sma’ drink — and for siller buttons, and buckles, and the lave of sic vanities, there is nae end of them.”

      “Idiots! “ muttered Cleveland between his teeth; and then added, “I suppose they are often ashore, to show all their bravery to the lasses of Kirkwall?”

      “Ne’er a bit of that are they. The Captain will scarce let them stir ashore without the boatswain go in the boat — as rough a tarpaulin as ever swabb’d a deck — and you may as weel catch a cat without her claws, as him without his cutlass and his double brace of pistols about him; every man stands as much in awe of him as of the commander himsell.”

      “That must be Hawkins, or the devil,” said Cleveland.

      “Aweel, Captain,” replied the jagger, “be he the tane or the tither, or a wee bit o’ baith, mind it is you that gives him these names, and not I.”

      “Why, Captain Cleveland,” said the Udaller, “this may prove the very consort you spoke of.”

      “They must have had some good luck, then,” said Cleveland, “ to put them in better plight than when I left them. — Did they speak of having lost their consort, pedlar?”

      “In troth did they,” said Bryce; “that is, they said something about a partner that had gone down to Davie Jones in these seas.”

      “And did you tell them what you knew of her?” said the Udaller.

      “And wha the deevil wad hae been the fule, then,” said the pedlar, “that I suld say sae? When they kend what came of the ship, the next question wad have been about the cargo, — and ye wad not have had me bring down an armed vessel on the coast, to harrie the poor folk about a wheen rags of duds that the sea flung upon their shores?”

      “Besides what might have been found in your own pack, you scoundrel!” said Magnus Troil; an observation which produced a loud laugh. The Udaller could not help joining in the hilarity which applauded his jest; but instantly composing his countenance, he said, in an unusually grave tone, “ You may laugh, my friends; but this is a matter which brings both a curse and a shame on the country; and till we learn to regard the rights of them that suffer by the winds and waves, we shall deserve to be oppressed and hag-ridden, as we have been and are, by the superior strength of the strangers who rule us.”

      The company hung their heads at the rebuke of Magnus Troil. Perhaps some, even of the better class, might be conscience-struck on their own account; and all of them were sensible that the appetite for plunder, on the part of the tenants and inferiors, was not at all times restrained with sufficient strictness. But Cleveland made answer gaily, “ If these honest fellows be my comrades, I will answer for them that they will never trouble the country about a parcel of chests, hammocks, and such trumpery, that the Roost may have washed ashore out of my poor sloop. What signifies to them whether the trash went to Bryce Snailsfoot, or to the bottom, or to the devil? So unbuckle thy pack, Bryce, and show the ladies thy cargo, and perhaps we may see something that will please them.”

      “It cannot be his consort,” said Brenda, in a whisper to her sister; “he would have shown more joy at her appearance.”

      “It must be the vessel,” answered Minna; “ I saw his eye glisten at the thought of being again united to the partner of his dangers.”

      “Perhaps it glistened,” said her sister,


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