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<h1> CAPTAIN BLOOD </h1>
<h2> By Rafael Sabatini </h2>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<h2> CAPTAIN BLOOD HIS ODYSSEY </h2>
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<h2> CHAPTER I. THE MESSENGER </h2>
<p>Peter Blood, bachelor of medicine and several other things besides, smoked
a pipe and tended the geraniums boxed on the sill of his window above
Water Lane in the town of Bridgewater.</p>
<p>Sternly disapproving eyes considered him from a window opposite, but went
disregarded. Mr. Blood's attention was divided between his task and the
stream of humanity in the narrow street below; a stream which poured for
the second time that day towards Castle Field, where earlier in the
afternoon Ferguson, the Duke's chaplain, had preached a sermon containing
more treason than divinity.</p>
<p>These straggling, excited groups were mainly composed of men with green
boughs in their hats and the most ludicrous of weapons in their hands.
Some, it is true, shouldered fowling pieces, and here and there a sword
was brandished; but more of them were armed with clubs, and most of them
trailed the mammoth pikes fashioned out of scythes, as formidable to the
eye as they were clumsy to the hand. There were weavers, brewers,
carpenters, smiths, masons, bricklayers, cobblers, and representatives of
every other of the trades of peace among these improvised men of war.
Bridgewater, like Taunton, had yielded so generously of its manhood to the
service of the bastard Duke that for any to abstain whose age and strength
admitted of his bearing arms was to brand himself a coward or a papist.</p>
<p>Yet Peter Blood, who was not only able to bear arms, but trained and
skilled in their use, who was certainly no coward, and a papist only when
it suited him, tended his geraniums and smoked his pipe on that warm July
evening as indifferently as if nothing were afoot. One other thing he did.
He flung after those war-fevered enthusiasts a line of Horace—a poet
for whose work he had early conceived an inordinate affection:</p>
<p>"Quo, quo, scelesti, ruitis?"</p>
<p>And now perhaps you guess why the hot, intrepid blood inherited from the
roving sires of his Somersetshire mother remained cool amidst all this
frenzied fanatical heat of rebellion; why the turbulent spirit which had
forced him once from the sedate academical bonds his father would have
imposed upon him, should now remain quiet in the very midst of turbulence.
You realize how he regarded these men who were rallying to the banners of
liberty—the banners woven by the virgins of Taunton, the girls from
the seminaries of Miss Blake and Mrs. Musgrove, who—as the ballad
runs—had ripped open their silk petticoats to make colours for King
Monmouth's army. That Latin line, contemptuously flung after them as they
clattered down the cobbled street, reveals his mind. To him they were
fools rushing in wicked frenzy upon their ruin.</p>
<p>You see, he knew too much about this fellow Monmouth and the pretty brown
slut who had borne him, to be deceived by the legend of legitimacy, on the
strength of which this standard of rebellion had been raised. He had read
the absurd proclamation posted at the Cross at Bridgewater—as it had
been posted also at Taunton and elsewhere—setting forth that "upon
the decease of our Sovereign Lord Charles the Second, the right of
succession to the Crown of England, Scotland, France, and Ireland, with
the dominions and territories thereunto belonging, did legally descend and
devolve upon the most illustrious and high-born Prince James, Duke of
Monmouth, son and heir apparent to the said King Charles the Second."</p>
<p>It had moved him to laughter, as had the further announcement that "James
Duke of York did first cause the said late King to be poysoned, and
immediately thereupon did usurp and invade the Crown."</p>
<p>He knew not which was the greater lie. For Mr. Blood had spent a third of
his life in the Netherlands, where this same James Scott—who now
proclaimed himself James the Second, by the grace of God, King, et cetera—first
saw the light some six-and-thirty years ago, and he was acquainted with
the story current there of the fellow's real paternity. Far from being
legitimate—by virtue of a pretended secret marriage between Charles
Stuart and Lucy Walter—it was possible that this Monmouth who now
proclaimed himself King of England was not even the illegitimate child of
the late sovereign. What but ruin and disaster could be the end of this
grotesque pretension? How could it be hoped that England would ever
swallow such a Perkin? And it was on his behalf, to uphold his fantastic
claim, that these West Country clods, led by a few armigerous Whigs, had
been seduced into rebellion!</p>
<p>"Quo, quo, scelesti, ruitis?"</p>
<p>He laughed and sighed in one; but the laugh dominated the sigh, for Mr.
Blood was unsympathetic, as are most self-sufficient men; and he was very
self-sufficient; adversity had taught him so to be. A more tender-hearted
man, possessing his vision and his knowledge, might have found cause for
tears in the contemplation of these ardent, simple, Nonconformist sheep
going forth to the shambles—escorted to the rallying ground on
Castle Field by wives and daughters, sweethearts and mothers, sustained by
the delusion that they were to take the field in defence of Right, of
Liberty, and of Religion. For he knew, as all Bridgewater knew and had
known now for some hours, that it was Monmouth's intention to deliver
battle that same night. The Duke was to lead a surprise attack upon the
Royalist army under Feversham that was now encamped on Sedgemoor. Mr.
Blood assumed that Lord Feversham would be equally well-informed, and if
in this assumption he was wrong, at least he was justified of it. He was
not to suppose the Royalist commander so indifferently skilled in the
trade he followed.</p>
<p>Mr. Blood knocked the ashes from his pipe, and drew back to close his
window. As he did so, his glance travelling straight across the street met
at last the glance of those hostile eyes that watched him. There were two
pairs, and they belonged to the Misses Pitt, two amiable, sentimental
maiden ladies who yielded to none in Bridgewater in their worship of the
handsome Monmouth.</p>
<p>Mr. Blood smiled and inclined his head, for he was on friendly terms with
these ladies, one of whom, indeed, had been for a little while his
patient. But there was no response to his greeting. Instead, the eyes gave
him back a stare of cold disdain. The smile on his thin lips grew a little
broader, a little less pleasant. He understood the reason of that
hostility, which had been daily growing in this past week since Monmouth
had come to turn the brains of women of all ages. The Misses Pitt, he
apprehended, contemned him that he, a young and vigorous man, of a
military training which might now be valuable to the Cause, should stand
aloof; that he should placidly smoke his pipe and tend his geraniums on
this evening of all evenings, when men of spirit were rallying to the
Protestant Champion, offering their blood to place him on the throne where
he belonged.</p>
<p>If Mr. Blood had condescended to debate the matter with these ladies, he
might have urged that having had his fill of wandering and adventuring, he
was now embarked upon the career for which he had been originally intended
and for which his studies had equipped him; that he was a man of medicine
and not of war; a healer, not a slayer. But they would have answered him,
he knew, that in such a cause it behoved every man who deemed himself a
man to take up arms. They would have pointed out that their own nephew
Jeremiah, who was by trade a sailor, the master of a ship—which by
an ill-chance for that young man had come to anchor at this season in
Bridgewater Bay—had quitted the helm to snatch up a musket in
defence of Right. But Mr. Blood was not of those who argue. As I have
said, he was a self-sufficient man.</p>
<p>He closed the window, drew the curtains, and turned to the pleasant,
candle-lighted room, and the table on which Mrs. Barlow, his housekeeper,
was in the very act of spreading supper. To her, however, he spoke aloud
his thought.</p>
<p>"It's out of favour I am with the vinegary virgins over the way."</p>
<p>He had a pleasant, vibrant voice, whose metallic ring was softened and
muted by the Irish accent which in all his wanderings he had never lost.
It was a voice that could woo seductively and caressingly, or command in
such a way as to compel obedience. Indeed, the man's whole nature was in
that voice of his. For the rest of him, he was tall and spare, swarthy of
tint as a gipsy, with eyes that were startlingly blue in that dark face
and under those level black brows. In their glance those eyes, flanking a
high-bridged, intrepid nose, were of singular penetration and of a steady
haughtiness that went well with his firm lips. Though dressed in black as
became his calling, yet it was with an elegance derived from the love of
clothes that is peculiar to the adventurer he had been, rather than to the
staid medicus he now was. His coat was of fine camlet, and it was laced
with silver; there were ruffles of Mechlin at his wrists and a Mechlin
cravat encased his throat. His great black periwig was as sedulously
curled as any at Whitehall.</p>
<p>Seeing him thus, and perceiving his real nature, which was plain upon him,
you might have been tempted to speculate how long such a man would be
content to lie by in this little backwater of the world into which chance
had swept him some six months ago; how long he would continue to pursue
the trade for which he had qualified himself before he had begun to live.
Difficult of belief though it may be when you know his history, previous
and subsequent, yet it is possible that but for the trick that Fate was
about to play him, he might have continued this peaceful existence,
settling down completely to the life of a doctor in this Somersetshire
haven. It is possible, but not probable.</p>
<p>He was the son of an Irish medicus, by a Somersetshire lady in whose veins
ran the rover blood of the Frobishers, which may account for a certain
wildness that had early manifested itself in his disposition. This
wildness had profoundly alarmed his father, who for an Irishman was of a
singularly peace-loving nature. He had early resolved that the boy should
follow his own honourable profession, and Peter Blood, being quick to
learn and oddly greedy of knowledge, had satisfied his parent by receiving
at the age of twenty the degree of baccalaureus medicinae at Trinity
College, Dublin. His father survived that satisfaction by three months
only. His mother had then been dead some years already. Thus Peter Blood
came into an inheritance of some few hundred pounds, with which he had set
out to see the world and give for a season a free rein to that restless
spirit by which he was imbued. A set of curious chances led him to take
service with the Dutch, then at war with France; and a predilection for
the sea made him elect that this service should be upon that element. He
had the advantage of a commission under the famous de Ruyter, and fought
in the Mediterranean engagement in which that great Dutch admiral lost his
life.</p>
<p>After the Peace of Nimeguen his movements are obscure. But we know that he
spent two years in a Spanish prison, though we do not know how he
contrived to get there. It may be due to this that upon his release he
took his sword to France, and saw service with the French in their warring
upon the Spanish Netherlands. Having reached, at last, the age of
thirty-two, his appetite for adventure surfeited, his health having grown
indifferent as the result of a neglected wound, he was suddenly
overwhelmed by homesickness. He took ship from Nantes with intent to cross
to Ireland. But the vessel being driven by stress of weather into
Bridgewater Bay, and Blood's health having grown worse during the voyage,
he decided to go ashore there, additionally urged to it by the fact that
it was his mother's native soil.</p>
<p>Thus in January of that year 1685 he had come to Bridgewater, possessor of
a fortune that was approximately the same as that with which he had
originally set out from Dublin eleven years ago.</p>
<p>Because he liked the place, in which his health was rapidly restored to
him, and because he conceived that he had passed through adventures enough
for a man's lifetime, he determined to settle there, and take up at last
the profession of medicine from which he had, with so little profit,
broken away.</p>
<p>That is all his story, or so much of it as matters up to that night, six
months later, when the battle of Sedgemoor was fought.</p>
<p>Deeming the impending action no affair of his, as indeed it was not, and
indifferent to the activity with which Bridgewater was that night agog,
Mr. Blood closed his ears to the sounds of it, and went early to bed. He
was peacefully asleep long before eleven o'clock, at which hour, as you
know, Monmouth rode but with his rebel host along the Bristol Road,
circuitously to avoid the marshland that lay directly between himself and
the Royal Army. You also know that his numerical advantage—possibly
counter-balanced by the greater steadiness of the regular troops on the
other side—and the advantages he derived from falling by surprise
upon an army that was more or less asleep, were all lost to him by
blundering and bad leadership before ever he was at grips with Feversham.</p>
<p>The armies came into collision in the neighbourhood of two o'clock in the
morning. Mr. Blood slept undisturbed through the distant boom of cannon.
Not until four o'clock, when the sun was rising to dispel the last wisps
of mist over that stricken field of battle, did he awaken from his
tranquil slumbers.</p>
<p>He sat up in bed, rubbed the sleep from his eyes, and collected himself.
Blows were thundering upon the door of his house, and a voice was calling
incoherently. This was the noise that had aroused him. Conceiving that he
had to do with some urgent obstetrical case, he reached for bedgown and
slippers, to go below. On the landing he almost collided with Mrs. Barlow,
new-risen and unsightly, in a state of panic. He quieted her cluckings
with a word of reassurance, and went himself to open.</p>
<p>There in slanting golden light of the new-risen sun stood a breathless,
wild-eyed man and a steaming horse. Smothered in dust and grime, his
clothes in disarray, the left sleeve of his doublet hanging in rags, this
young man opened his lips to speak, yet for a long moment remained
speechless.</p>
<p>In that moment Mr. Blood recognized him for the young shipmaster, Jeremiah
Pitt, the nephew of the maiden ladies opposite, one who had been drawn by
the general enthusiasm into the vortex of that rebellion. The street was
rousing, awakened by the sailor's noisy advent; doors were opening, and
lattices were being unlatched for the protrusion of anxious, inquisitive
heads.</p>
<p>"Take your time, now," said Mr. Blood. "I never knew speed made by
overhaste."</p>
<p>But the wild-eyed lad paid no heed to the admonition. He plunged,
headlong, into speech, gasping, breathless.</p>
<p>"It is Lord Gildoy," he panted. "He is sore wounded... at Oglethorpe's
Farm by the river. I bore him thither... and... and he sent me for you.
Come away! Come away!"</p>
<p>He would have clutched the doctor, and haled him forth by force in bedgown
and slippers as he was. But the doctor eluded that too eager hand.</p>
<p>"To be sure, I'll come," said he. He was distressed. Gildoy had been a
very friendly, generous patron to him since his settling in these parts.
And Mr. Blood was eager enough to do what he now could to discharge the
debt, grieved that the occasion should have arisen, and in such a manner—for
he knew quite well that the rash young nobleman had been an active agent
of the Duke's. "To be sure, I'll come. But first give me leave to get some
clothes and other things that I may need."</p>
<p>"There's no time to lose."</p>
<p>"Be easy now. I'll lose none. I tell ye again, ye'll go quickest by going
leisurely. Come in... take a chair..." He threw open the door of a
parlour.</p>
<p>Young Pitt waved aside the invitation.</p>
<p>"I'll wait here. Make haste, in God's name." Mr. Blood went off to dress
and to fetch a case of instruments.</p>
<p>Questions concerning the precise nature of Lord Gildoy's hurt could wait
until they were on their way. Whilst he pulled on his boots, he gave Mrs.
Barlow instructions for the day, which included the matter of a dinner he
was not destined to eat.</p>
<p>When at last he went forth again, Mrs. Barlow clucking after him like a
disgruntled fowl, he found young Pitt smothered in a crowd of scared,
half-dressed townsfolk—mostly women—who had come hastening for
news of how the battle had sped. The news he gave them was to be read in
the lamentations with which they disturbed the morning air.</p>
<p>At sight of the doctor, dressed and booted, the case of instruments tucked
under his arm, the messenger disengaged himself from those who pressed
about, shook off his weariness and the two tearful aunts that clung most
closely, and seizing the bridle of his horse, he climbed to the saddle.</p>
<p>"Come along, sir," he cried. "Mount behind me."</p>
<p>Mr. Blood, without wasting words, did as he was bidden. Pitt touched the
horse with his spur. The little crowd gave way, and thus, upon the crupper
of that doubly-laden horse, clinging to the belt of his companion, Peter
Blood set out upon his Odyssey. For this Pitt, in whom he beheld no more
than the messenger of a wounded rebel gentleman, was indeed the very
messenger of Fate.</p>
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