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    Chapter 28

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    "It scares the sea-birds from their nests;
    They dart and wheel with deafening screams;
    Now dark--and now their wings and breasts
    Flash back amid disastrous gleams.
    O, sin! what hast thou done on this fair earth?
    The world, O man! is wailing o'er thy birth."

    Dana.

    It was the policy of the colonists to lead their pursuers directly up to
    the Western Roads. On the small island, under which vessels were
    accustomed to anchor, was a dwelling or two, and a battery of two
    guns--nine-pounders. These guns were to command the anchorage. The
    island lay directly in front of the mouth of the passage, making a very
    beautiful harbour within it; though the water was so smooth in the
    roads, and the last were so much the most convenient for getting
    under-way in, that this more sheltered haven was very little used. On
    the present occasion, however, all the colony craft beat up past the
    island, and anchored inside of it. The crews were then landed, and they
    repaired to the battery, which they found ready for service in
    consequence of orders previously sent.

    Here, then, was the point where hostilities would be likely to commence,
    should hostilities commence at all. One of the boats was sent across to
    the nearest island inland, where a messenger was landed, with directions
    to carry a letter to Pennock, at the Reef. This messenger was compelled
    to walk about six miles, the whole distance in a grove of young palms
    and bread-fruit trees; great pains having been taken to cultivate both
    of these plants throughout the group, in spots favourable to their
    growth. After getting through the grove, the path came out on a
    plantation, where a horse was kept for this especial object; and here
    the man mounted and galloped off to the Reef, soon finding himself amid
    a line of some of the most flourishing plantations in the colony.
    Fortunately, however, as things then threatened, these plantations were
    not on the main channel, but stood along the margin of a passage which
    was deep enough to receive any craft that floated, but which was a
    _cul-de-sac_, that could be entered only from the eastward. Along the
    margin of the ship-channel, there was not yet soil of the right quality
    for cultivation, though it was slowly forming, as the sands that lay

    thick on the adjacent rocks received other substances by exposure to the
    atmosphere.

    The Anne and her consorts had been anchored about an hour, when the
    strangers hove-to in the roads, distant about half a mile from the
    battery. Here they all hoisted white flags, as if desirous of having a
    parley. The governor did not well know how to act. He could not tell
    whether or not it would do to trust such men; and he as little liked to
    place Betts, or any other
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