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The Armed Ship America; Or, When We Sailed from Salem

Chapter 2: NOTE.
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About This Book

A young Salem seaman narrates his first cruise aboard a fast privateer fitted with twenty guns and commanded by an experienced captain. The first-person account follows the vessel's preparation in port, the camaraderie and discipline of its crew, and a series of at-sea adventures including chases, captures of enemy vessels, encounters with prisoners, sudden outbreaks and close-quarters fighting. Alternating practical detail about shipboard life and vivid action scenes, the narrative conveys the risks, rewards, and moral strains of privateering while sketching owners' motives, seafaring routine, and the tense atmosphere of wartime cruising.

NOTE.

A package of manuscript, the pages of which had evidently been cut from an old ledger or journal, each leaf yellowed by time and worn as if with much use, lately came into the possession of him who, rightfully or wrongfully, claims to be the author of the yarn spun between these covers. Both sides of the paper were covered with writing in a boyish hand, and much of the subject matter related to private affairs such as could be of no especial interest to the general reader. All that had reference to the cruise of the private-armed ship America, and the doings of the writer, Nathan Crowninshield, and his comrade, Simon Ropes, has been preserved herein. It is set down very nearly as it was written eighty years ago, by the lad from Salem, who, at the time of preparing the manuscript, was living on Staten Island in New York Bay. That it is a true and faithful account of the eventful cruise, we know full well, since the more important happenings have been verified by documents to be found in the custom-houses at Salem, Boston, and Portland, Maine.


CONTENTS.

CHAPTER   PAGE
I. An Opportunity 13
II. Under Way 28
III. Omens 43
IV. Ghosts 59
V. The Prisoners 74
VI. A Stern Chase 89
VII. A Lively Scrimmage 105
VIII. Cheering Information 120
IX. The Outbreak 134

LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS.

  PAGE
It was with difficulty that we could make our way to the head of the dock.” Frontispiece
The old gunner straightened himself up, surveying both Simon and me. 30
‘I am not asking you lads to tell tales out of school,’ the captain said. 46
Suddenly I saw, rising out from the forecastle hatchway, a white mass. 62
“‘We don’t count on giving a double portion to any one of you this noon.’” 87
What a cheer went up from our men. 131
We divided ourselves into two watches. 135
In another instant the boarding pike would have found its way through my body. 140

THE ARMED SHIP AMERICA;

OR,

WHEN WE SAILED FROM SALEM.