The Book of Buried Treasure. Ralph D. Paine

The Book of Buried Treasure - Ralph D. Paine


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       Ralph D. Paine

      The Book of Buried Treasure

      e-artnow, 2021

       Contact: [email protected]

      EAN 4064066389192

      Table of Contents

       Chapter I: The World-Wide Hunt for Vanished Riches

       Chapter II: Captain Kidd in Fact and Fiction

       Chapter III: Captain Kidd, His Treasure

       Chapter IV: Captain Kidd, His Trial, and Death

       Chapter V: The Wondrous Fortune of William Phips

       Chapter VI: The Bold Sea Rogue, John Quelch

       Chapter VII: The Armada Galleon of Tobermory Bay

       Chapter VIII: The Lost Plate Fleet of Vigo

       Chapter IX: The Pirates' Hoard of Trinidad

       Chapter X: The Lure of Cocos Island

       Chapter XI: The Mystery of the Lutine Frigate

       Chapter XII: The Toilers of the Thetis

       Chapter XIII: The Quest of El Dorado

       Chapter XIV: The Wizardry of the Divining Rod

       Chapter XV: Sundry Pirates and Their Booty

       Chapter XVI: Practical Hints for Treasure Seekers

      pic H.M.S. Lutine leaving Yarmouth Roads, Oct. 9, 1799, on her last voyage. (From the painting by Frank Mason, R.A., in the Committee Room of Lloyd's, London.) See Chapter XI.

      THE BOOK OF BURIED TREASURE

      Of all the lives I ever say,

       A Pirate's be for I.

       Hap what hap may he's allus gay

       An' drinks an' bungs his eye.

       For his work he's never loth:

       An' a-pleasurin' he'll go;

       Tho' certain sure to be popt off,

       Yo, ho, with the rum below!

      In Bristowe I left Poll ashore,

       Well stored wi' togs an' gold,

       An' off I goes to sea for more,

       A-piratin' so bold.

       An' wounded in the arm I got,

       An' then a pretty blow;

       Comed home I find Poll's flowed away,

       Yo, ho, with the rum below!

      An' when my precious leg was lopt,

       Just for a bit of fun,

       I picks it up, on t'other hopt,

       An' rammed it in a gun.

       "What's that for?" cries out Salem Dick;

       "What for, my jumpin' beau?

       "Why, to give the lubbers one more kick!"

       Yo, ho, with the rum below!

      I 'llows this crazy hull o' mine

       At sea has had its share:

       Marooned three times an' wounded nine

       An' blowed up in the air.

       But ere to Execution Bay

       The wind these bones do blow,

       I'll drink an' fight what's left away,

       Yo, ho, with the rum below!

      —An Old English Ballad.

      Chapter I.

       The World-Wide Hunt for Vanished Riches

       Table of Contents

      The language has no more boldly romantic words than pirate and galleon and the dullest imagination is apt to be kindled by any plausible dream of finding their lost treasures hidden on lonely beach or tropic key, or sunk fathoms deep in salt water. In the preface of that rare and exceedingly diverting volume, "The Pirates' Own Book," the unnamed author sums up the matter with so much gusto and with so gorgeously appetizing a flavor that he is worth quoting to this extent:

      "With the name of pirate is also associated ideas of rich plunder, caskets of buried jewels, chests of gold ingots, bags of outlandish coins, secreted in lonely, out of the way places, or buried about the wild shores of rivers and unexplored sea coasts, near rocks and trees bearing mysterious marks indicating where the treasure was hid. And as it is his invariable practice to secrete and bury his booty, and from the perilous life he leads, being often killed or captured, he can never revisit the spot again, therefore immense sums remain buried in those places and are irrevocably lost. Search is often made by persons who labor in anticipation of throwing up with their spade and pickaxe, gold bars, diamond crosses sparkling amongst the dirt, bags of golden doubloons and chests wedged close with moidores, ducats and pearls; but although great treasures lie hid in this way, it seldom happens that any is recovered."1

      In this tamed, prosaic age of ours, treasure-seeking might seem to be the peculiar province of fiction, but the fact is that expeditions are fitting out every little while, and mysterious schooners flitting from many ports, lured by grimy, tattered charts presumed to show where the hoards were hidden, or steering their courses by nothing more tangible than legend and surmise. As the Kidd tradition survives along the Atlantic coast, so on divers shores of other seas persist the same kind of wild tales, the more convincing of which are strikingly alike in that the lone survivor of the red-handed crew, having somehow escaped the hanging, shooting, or drowning that he handsomely merited, preserved a chart showing where the treasure had been hid. Unable to return to the place, he gave the parchment to some friend or shipmate, this dramatic transfer usually happening as a death-bed ceremony. The recipient, after digging in vain and heartily damning the departed pirate for his misleading landmarks and bearings, handed the chart down to the next generation.

      It will be readily perceived that this is the stock motive of almost all buried treasure fiction, the trademark of a certain brand of adventure story, but it is really more entertaining to know that such charts and records exist and are made use of by the expeditions of the present day. Opportunity knocks at the door. He who would gamble in shares of such a speculation may find sun-burned, tarry


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