<SPAN name="THE_LIFE_AND_EXPLOITS_OF_ANNE_BONNEY"></SPAN>
<h2>THE LIFE AND EXPLOITS OF ANNE BONNEY.</h2>
This female pirate was a native of Cork. Her father was an
attorney, and, by his activity in business, rose to considerable
respectability in that place. Anne was the fruit of an unlawful
connexion with his own servant maid, with whom he afterwards eloped
to America, leaving his own affectionate and lawful wife. He
settled at Carolina, and for some time followed his own profession;
but soon commenced merchant, and was so successful as to purchase a
considerable plantation. There he lived with his servant in the
character of his wife; but she dying, his daughter Anne
superintended the domestic affairs of her father.
<p>During her residence with her parent she was supposed to have a
considerable fortune, and was accordingly addressed by young men of
respectable situations in life. It happened with Anne, however, as
with many others of her youth and sex, that her feelings, and not
her interest, determined her choice of a husband. She married a
young sailor without a shilling. The avaricious father was so
enraged, that, deaf to the feelings of a parent, he turned his own
child out of doors. Upon this cruel usage, and the disappointment
of her fortune, Anne and her husband sailed for the island of
Providence, in the hope of gaining employment.</p>
<p>Acting a part very different from that of Mary Read, Anne's
affections were soon estranged from her husband by Captain Rackam;
and eloping with him, she went to sea in men's clothes. Proving
with child, the captain put her on shore, and entrusted her to the
care of some friends until her recovery, when she again accompanied
him in his expeditions.</p>
<p>Upon the king's proclamation offering a pardon to all pirates,
he surrendered, and went into the privateering business, as we have
related before: he, however, soon embraced an opportunity to return
to his favorite employment. In all his piratical exploits Anne
accompanied him; and, as we have already recorded, displayed such
courage and intrepidity, that she, along with Mary Read and a
seaman, were the last three who remained on board when the vessel
was taken.</p>
<p>Anne was known to many of the planters in Jamaica, who
remembered to have seen her in her father's house, and they were
disposed to intercede in her behalf. Her unprincipled conduct, in
leaving her own husband and forming an illicit connexion with
Rackam, tended, however, to render her friends less active. By a
special favor, Rackam was permitted to visit her the day before he
was executed; but, instead of condoling with him on account of his
sad fate, she only observed, that she was sorry to see him there,
but if he had fought like a man he needed not have been hanged like
a dog. Being with child, she remained in prison until her recovery,
was reprieved from time to time, and though we cannot communicate
to our readers any particulars of her future life, or the manner of
her death, yet it is certain that she was not executed.</p>
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