more than a hundred yards distant from the fiery mass. As a matter of course, while the cable was paid out, the portion to which the lanyard, or rope part of the shank-painter, was fastened, dropped into the water, while the felucca rode by the chain. These events occupied less than five minutes; and all had been done with a steadiness and promptitude which seemed more like instinct than reason. Raoul's voice was not heard, except in the few orders mentioned; and when, by the glaring light which illuminated all in the lugger and the adjacent water to some distance, nearly to the brightness of noon-day, he saw Ghita gazing at the spectacle in awed admiration and terror; he went to her, and spoke as if the whole were merely a brilliant spectacle, devised for their amusement. "Our girandola is second only to that of St. Peter's," he said, smiling. "'T was a narrow escape, love; but, thanks to thy God! if thou wilt it shall be so we have received no harm." "And you have been the agent of his goodness, Raoul; I have witnessed all from this spot. The call to the men brought me on deck; and, oh, how I trembled as I saw you on the flaming mass!" "It has been cunningly planned on the part of Messieurs les Anglais, but it has signally failed. That coaster has a cargo of tar and naval stores on board; and capturing her this evening, they have thought to extinguish our lantern by the brighter and fiercer flame of their own. But Le Feu-Follet will shine again when their fire is dead!" "Is there, then, no danger that the brûlot will yet come down upon us? she is fearfully near!" "Not sufficiently so to do us harm; more especially as our sails are damp with dew. Here she cannot come so long as our cable stands; and as that is under water where she lies it cannot burn. In half-an-hour there will be little of her left, and we will enjoy the bon-fire while it lasts." And, now that the fear of danger was past, it was a sight truly to be enjoyed. Every anxious and curious face in the lugger was to be seen, under that brilliant light, turned toward the glowing mass: as the sun-flower follows the great source of heat in his track athwart the heavens; while the spars, sails, guns, and even the smallest object on board the lugger, started out of the obscurity of night into the brightness of such an illumination, as if composing parts of some brilliant scenic display. But so fierce a flame soon exhausted itself. Before long the felucca's masts fell, and with them a pyramid of fire. Then the glowing deck tumbled in; and, finally, timber after timber and plank after plank fell, until the conflagration in a great measure extinguished itself in the water on which it floated. An hour after the flames appeared, little remained but the embers which were glowing in the hold of the wreck. CHAPTER XII. A justice of the peace, for the time being, The Niger's source, they 'd meet him with - We know. HALLECK, Raoul was not mistaken as to the means employed by his enemies, and the manner in which they were obtained. The frigate had found one of the feluccas loaded with naval stores, including some ten or fifteen barrels of tar; and it instantly struck Griffin, who was burning to revenge the defeat of the morning, that the prize might be converted into a fire-vessel. As the second lieutenant volunteered to carry her in, always a desperate service, Cuffe gave his consent. Nothing could have been better managed than the whole duty connected with this exploit, including the manner in which our hero saved his vessel from destruction. The frigate kept between her prize and the lugger, to conceal the fact that a boat remained on board the former; and when all was ready, the felucca was apparently permitted to proceed on her voyage. The other two prizes were allowed to go free also, as cloaks to the whole affair. Griffin, as has been seen, kept standing in for the land, his object being to get up stream from the lugger, and as near her as possible. When he found himself almost as far a-head as was desirable, drags were used to keep the craft stationary; and in this manner she drifted down on her intended victim, as has been already described. But for the sagacity and uneasiness of Ithuel, the plan would altogether have escaped detection; and but for the coolness, courage, and resources of Raoul it would infallibly have succeeded, notwithstanding the suspicions that had been excited. Cuffe, and the people on deck, watched the whole affair with the deepest interest. They were barely able to see the sails of the felucca by means of a night-glass as she was dropping down on the lugger; and Yelverton had just exclaimed that the two vessels were foul of each other when the flames broke out. As a matter of course, at that distance, both craft seemed on fire; and when Le Feu-Follet had dropped a hundred yards nearer to the frigate, leaving the felucca blazing, the two were so exactly in a line as to bring them together as seen from the decks of the former. The English expected every moment to hear the explosion of the lugger's magazine; but as it did not happen they came to the conclusion that it had been drowned. As for Griffin, he pulled in-shore both to avoid the fire of Le Feu-Follet, in passing her broadside, and in the hope of intercepting Raoul while endeavouring to escape in a boat. He even went to a landing in the river quite a league from the anchorage, and waited there until long past midnight, when, finding the night beginning to cloud over and the obscurity to increase, he returned to the frigate, giving the smouldering wreck a wide berth for fear of accidents. Such, then, was the state of things when Captain Cuffe ap-peared on deck, just as the day began to dawn on the following morning. He had given orders to be called at that hour, and was now all impatience to get a view of the sea, more particularly inshore. At length the curtain began slowly to rise, and his view extended farther and farther towards the river until all was visible, even to the very land. Not a craft of any sort was in sight. Even the wreck had disappeared; though this was subsequently discovered in the surf, having drifted out with the current until it struck an eddy which carried it in again, when it was finally stranded. No vestige of Le Feu-Follet, however, was to be seen. Not even a tent on the shore, a wandering boat, a drifting spar, or a rag of a sail! All had disappeared, no doubt, in the conflagration. As Cuffe went below, he walked with a more erect mien than he had done since the affair of the previous morning; and as he opened his writing-desk, it was with the manner of one entirely satisfied with himself and his own exertions. Still, a generous regret mingled with his triumph. It was a great thing to have destroyed the most pernicious privateer that sailed out of France; and yet it was a melancholy fate to befall seventy or eighty human beings - to perish like so many curling caterpillars, destroyed by fire. Nevertheless, the thing was done; and it must be reported to the authorities above him. The following letter was consequently written to the commanding officer in that sea, viz: "H. M. S. Proserpine, off the mouth of the Golo, "MY LORD I have the satisfaction of reporting, for the information of my Lords' Commissioners of the Admiralty, the destruction of the Republican privateer, the Le Few-Folly, commanded by the notorious Raoul Yvard, on the night of the 22nd instant. The circumstances attending this important success are as follows: Understanding that the celebrated picaroon had been on the Neapolitan and Roman coasts doing much mischief, I took His Majesty's ship close in, following up the peninsula, with the land in sight, until we got through the canal of Elba, early on the morning of the 21st. On opening Porto Ferrajo bay, we saw a lugger lying at anchor off the town, with English colours flying. As this was a friendly port, we could not suppose the craft to be the Le Few-Folly; but, determined to make sure, we beat in, signalling the stranger, until he took advantage of our stretching well over to the eastward, to slip round the rocks, and get off to windward. We followed for a short distance, and then ran over under the lee of Capraya, where we remained until the morning of the 22nd, when we again went off the town. We Sound the lugger in the offing; and being now well satisfied of her character, and it falling calm, I sent the boats after her, under Messrs. Winchester and Griffin, the first and second of this ship. After a sharp skirmish, in which we sustained some loss, though that of the Republicans was evidently much greater, Monsieur Yvard succeeded in effecting his escape, in consequence of a breeze suddenly springing up. Sail was now made on the ship, and we chased the lugger into the mouth of the Golo. Having fortunately captured a felucca with a quantity of tar and other combustible materials on board, as we drew in with the land, I determined to make a fire-ship of her, and to destroy the enemy by that mode; he having anchored within the shoals, beyond the reach of shot. Mr. Winchester, the first, having been wounded in the boat affair, I entrusted the execution of this duty to Mr. Griffin, who handsomely volunteered, and by whom it was effectually discharged about ten last evening in the coolest and most officer-like manner. I enclose this gentleman's report of the affair, and beg leave to recommend him to the favour of my Lords' Commissioners. With Mr. Winchester's good conduct, under a sharp fire, in the morning, the service has also every reason to be satisfied. I hope this valuable officer will soon be able to return to duty. "Permit me to congratulate you, my lord, on the complete destruction of this most pernicious cruiser of the enemy: so effectual has it been that nota spar or a fragment of wreck remains. We have reason to think every soul on board perished; and though this fearful loss of human life is to be deeply deplored, it has been made in the service of good government and religion. The lugger was filled with loose women, our people hearing them singing their philosophical and irreligious songs as they approached with the fire-vessel. I shall search the coast for any rafts that may be drifting about, and then proceed to Leghorn for fresh provisions. "I have the honour to be, my lord, "Your lordship's most obedient servant, "RICHARD CUFFE." "To Rear-Admiral the Right Hon. Lord Nelson, Duke of Bronte, &c. &c. &c." |