登陆注册
19498400000010

第10章 OUT CUTLASES AND BOARD(3)

Silas Talbot and his nautical infantrymen promptly fell in with the New York privateer Lively, a fair match for him, and as promptly sent her into port.He then ran offshore and picked up and carried into Boston two English privateers headed for New York with large cargoes of merchandise from the West Indies.But he was particularly anxious to square accounts with a renegade Captain Hazard who made Newport his base and had captured many American vessels with the stout brig King George, using her for "the base purpose of plundering his old neighbors and friends."On his second cruise in the Argo, young Silas Talbot encountered the perfidious King George to the southward of Long Island and riddled her with one broadside after another, first hailing Captain Hazard by name and cursing him in double-shotted phrases for the traitorous swab that he was.Then the seagoing infantry scrambled over the bulwarks and tumbled the Tories down their own hatches without losing a man.A prize crew with the humiliated King George made for New London, where there was much cheering in the port, and "even the women, both young and old, expressed the greatest joy."With no very heavy fighting, Talbot had captured five vessels and was keen to show what his crew could do against mettlesome foemen.He found them at last well out to sea in a large ship which seemed eager to engage him.Only a few hundred feet apart through a long afternoon, they briskly and cheerily belabored each other with grape and solid shot.Talbot's speaking-trumpet was shot out of his hand, the tails of his coat were shorn off, and all the officers and men stationed with him on the quarter-deck were killed or wounded.

His crew reported that the Argo was in a sinking condition, with the water flooding the gun-deck, but he told them to lower a man or two in the bight of a line and they pluckily plugged the holes from overside.There was a lusty huzza when the Englishman's mainmast crashed to the deck and this finished the affair.Silas Talbot found that he had trounced the privateer Dragon, of twice his own tonnage and with the advantage in both guns and men.

While his crew was patching the Argo and pumping the water from her hold, the lookout yelled that another sail was making for them.Without hesitation Talbot somehow got this absurdly impudent one-masted craft of his under way and told those of his sixty men who survived to prepare for a second tussle.

Fortunately another Yankee privateer joined the chase and together they subdued the armed brig Hannah.When the Argo safely convoyed the two prizes into New Bedford, "all who beheld her were astonished that a vessel of her diminutive size could suffer so much and yet get safely to port."Men fought and slew each other in those rude and distant days with a certain courtesy, with a fine, punctilious regard for the etiquette of the bloody game.There was the Scotch skipper of the Betsy, a privateer, whom Silas Talbot hailed as follows, before they opened fire:

"You must now haul down those British colors, my friend.""Notwithstanding I find you an enemy, as I suspected," was the dignified reply, "yet, sir, I shall let them hang a little bit longer,--with your permission,--so fire away, Flanagan."During another of her cruises the Argo pursued an artfully disguised ship of the line which could have blown her to kingdom come with a broadside of thirty guns.The little Argo was actually becalmed within short range, but her company got out the sweeps and rowed her some distance before darkness and a favoring slant of wind carried them clear.In the summer of 1780, Captain Silas Talbot, again a mariner by title, was given the private cruiser General Washington with one hundred and twenty men, but he was less fortunate with her than when afloat in the tiny Argo with his sixty Continentals.Off Sandy Hook he ran into the British fleet under Admiral Arbuthnot and, being outsailed in a gale of wind, he was forced to lower his flag to the great seventy-four Culloden.After a year in English prisons he was released and made his way home, serving no more in the war but having the honor to command the immortal frigate Constitution in 1799 as a captain in the American Navy.

In several notable instances the privateersmen tried conclusions with ships that flew the royal ensign, and got the better of them.The hero of an uncommonly brilliant action of this sort was Captain George Geddes of Philadelphia, who was entrusted with the Congress, a noble privateer of twenty-four guns and two hundred men.Several of the smaller British cruisers had been sending parties ashore to plunder estates along the southern shores, and one of them, the sloop of war Savage, had even raided Washington's home at Mount Vernon.Later she shifted to the coast of Georgia in quest of loot and was unlucky enough to fall athwart Captain Geddes in the Congress.

The privateer was the more formidable ship and faster on the wind, forcing Captain Sterling of the Savage to accept the challenge.Disabled aloft very early in the fight, Captain Geddes was unable to choose his position, for which reason they literally battled hand-to-hand, hulls grinding against each other, the gunners scorched by the flashes of the cannon in the ports of the opposing ship, with scarcely room to ply the rammers, and the sailors throwing missiles from the decks, hand grenades, cold shot, scraps of iron, belaying-pins.

As the vessels lay interlocked, the Savage was partly dismasted and Captain Geddes, leaping upon the forecastle head, told the boarders to follow him.Before they could swing their cutlases and dash over the hammock-nettings, the British boatswain waved his cap and yelled that the Savage had surrendered.Captain Sterling was dead, eight others were killed, and twenty-four wounded.The American loss was about the same.Captain Geddes, however, was unable to save his prize because a British frigate swooped down and took them both into Charleston.

同类推荐
  • 普超三昧经

    普超三昧经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 远山堂剧品

    远山堂剧品

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 龙城录

    龙城录

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 脉理求真

    脉理求真

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 甘露军茶利菩萨供养念诵成就仪轨

    甘露军茶利菩萨供养念诵成就仪轨

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
热门推荐
  • 龙砥传说

    龙砥传说

    神龙一族突然全部灭亡且看主人翁将带龙族重新回归巅峰
  • 拯救女神秘籍

    拯救女神秘籍

    身为一个没人喜没人爱的屌丝,有一天我竟然得到一本秘籍,从而学会隐身术。老板看不见我,买东西不要钱,美女们看不见我,进女厕所没发现。于是那一天,我闯进了邻居堂姐家的浴室……暧昧,搞笑,青春,热血,黑道,武侠,玄幻。萝莉,御姐,女神,软妹,少妇,腐女,洋妞,本书应有尽有,小清新温馨文,绝对不黄不暴力,请大家放心阅读。
  • 这个魔女不一般

    这个魔女不一般

    主人公从一个普普通通的人变成了拥有魔法的使者,接下来会发生什么,只能看她的本事了。
  • 人鬼恋:前生我是你的妾

    人鬼恋:前生我是你的妾

    前世的爱恋,今生的纠缠。她,林颜落,一个普普通通的上班族。一次意外,让她从小带到大的玉镯破裂。从此,便恶梦缠身。而她的生活也变得不可思议了起来。一个是前世的王爷相公,另一个是今生的捉鬼大师,她该如何选择?恐怖的是后面还追随着她前世的情敌——芸王妃!
  • 明朝十讲

    明朝十讲

    国有几千年说不尽的历史,诸多英雄人物与成败往事都如过眼云烟,让人看不清楚。关键线索正系在明朝的身上。牵动这一线索,明朝的话题变得生动有趣,几千年的历史也变得亲切而清晰。明朝距离今天,已经过去了三百六十二年,但这并不意味明朝已经过时。明朝作为帝围的典型样本,关于它的话题值得读史之人细细品味,并细细为它的种种病症开出自己的药方。这也许是明朝历史之魅力所在。阅读明朝的历史,需要胆量,因为那里处处充满着阴谋与杀戮;品味明朝的历史,则需要一种温和的态度。
  • 一世狂战

    一世狂战

    他,顶天立地;她,柔情似水。青梅竹马却最终劳燕分飞,怪谁?
  • 觉醒:黑暗之眼

    觉醒:黑暗之眼

    一个被原来世界所抛弃的“黑暗之眼”宿主——陈默,来到了一个能够使用魔力的世界。不断的努力,不断的超越,直到发现那隐藏在这世界和“黑暗之眼”的惊天秘密……
  • 复仇公主和王子们

    复仇公主和王子们

    公主们小时候别人抛弃,长大后复仇中遇到了她们滴王子们
  • 泪落花间花也醉

    泪落花间花也醉

    一把幻月琴使陆瑾萱一家惨遭灭门,为查出真相,她屈身青楼卖艺。而凌岳天一家的失踪,是否跟这起案件有关呢。倘若真有关联,她跟情投意合的凌枫又该如何面对?还有对自己纠缠不休的表哥欧阳辰逸?报仇之路该如何走下去……
  • 似曾相识妻归来

    似曾相识妻归来

    “我怀孕了!”乐谣拿着单,惊喜至极。“恩,好。”沈墨宸的反应很平静,低沉的嗓音淡淡响起,“女孩1000万,男孩2000万。孩子落地,支票给你。从此各不相干。”乐谣的笑容戛然而止,原来从始至终他都当这是一桩生意!只是他没说双胞胎是多少钱,不是么?4年后,他们两个再次相遇。他依然如初,她却不再是从来的她。为了夺回曾经失去的芳心,他编制了一个又一个的温柔陷阱。当心再次深陷其中之时,曾经的真相却如同潘多拉盒子一样统统揭开……原来所有的一切,是让人如此不堪……你我似曾相识,无关风月只关刻骨。---沈墨宸乐谣