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    Chapter 18 - Page 2

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    necessity for pursuing the
    ungrateful trade any further. Could I return to the island, and get
    the articles of value left on it by the French, such as the copper
    they had not used, and divers pales received from the Bombay ship,
    which had been abandoned by us all under a tent, more profit would
    accrue to my owners than by any illicit commerce we could now possibly
    carry into effect on the coast.

    While Talcott, and the new chief-mate, and myself were discussing
    these points, the cry of "sail ho!" was heard. A large ship had
    suddenly hove up out of the morning's mist, within a mile of us, and I
    thought, at first, we had got under the guns of a Spanish
    man-of-war. A second look at her, however, satisfied us all, that,
    though heavy and armed, she was merely one of those clumsy traders
    that sailed, periodically, from the colonies to Spain. We went to
    quarters, and cleared ship, but made no effort to avoid the stranger.
    The Spaniards, of the two, were the most uneasy, I believe, their
    country being then at war with England; but we spoke each other
    without coming to blows. As soon as the strangers saw the American
    ensign, they expressed a wish to communicate with us; and, unwilling
    to let them come on board us, I volunteered a visit to the Spanish
    captain. He received me with formal politeness, and, after some
    preliminary discourse, he put into my hands some American newspapers,
    which contained a copy of the treaty of peace between the United
    States and France. On looking over the articles of this new compact, I
    found that, had our recapture of the Crisis been delayed to that very
    day, at noon, it would have been illegal. The two nations, in fact,
    were at peace, when the French seized the ship, but the customary
    provisions as to captures in distant seas, just brought us within the
    saving clauses. Such is war, and its concomitants!

    In the course of half an hour's conversation, I discovered that the
    Spaniard intended to touch at Valparaiso, and called, in order to get
    men, his own having suffered, up the coast, with the small-pox. His
    ship was large, carried a considerable armament, and he should not
    deem her safe from the smaller English cruisers, unless he doubled the
    Cape much stronger handed than he then was. I caught at the idea, and
    inquired what he thought of Frenchmen? They would answer his purpose,

    for France and Spain had a common enemy, and nothing would be easier
    than to send the French from Cadiz to Marseilles. A bargain was
    consequently struck on the spot.

    When I got back on board the Crisis, I had all the prisoners mustered
    on deck. They were made acquainted with the offers of the Spanish
    captain, with the fact that peace now existed between our respective
    countries,
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